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Page 10 • The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend .. ~
by Bob Hoeflich

Monday, June 26, 18t!5

Things to remember if you
plan to travel this summer

ing checks recommended by Social
A. The American Queen actual- There is a $5 set up fee for a lU by From Ed Pet~n
Social
Security
Security
for the convenience. safely .has no calliope.
20 foot spnce, but this mon ey is
Manager
In
Athens
ty. and speed.
B. No one on board the Ameri· later spe~•t on advertising.
For many individuals summerAnother importanl point is your
can Queen knows how to play a
Those interested in pre-registertime
is
vacation
time.
If
you're
a
Medicare
coverage. What happens
calliope.
·
ing to panicipate or whn wish mnre
Social
Security
beneficiary
travelif
you
get
sick? Generally, Medi·
C. -The sound of the calliope information may call 992 -5458.
ing
outside
the
United
States
and
care
does
not
pay for hospital or
The market is sponsored by the
gives the captain a headache.
iu
territories
(including
Puerto
medical
services
outside the U.S .
D. The com1H•ny is seldom Middleport Community AssoCia·
Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
However. there are three excep·
· going to usc the calliope so it will tion.
lions.
last longer.
Now- as a part of the annual Guam, American Samoa, and the
Northern
Mariana
Islands),
there
Medicare will pay for your care
You can selec! any of the above July 4th celebration in Middleport.
are
cenain
things
you
should
know.
in
qualified Canadian or .Meltican
or perhaps. you have another idea the 01ssociation will also stage an
If
you're
not
now
having
your
hospitals
if:
as to why the calliope on the Amer- area-wide tlea market sn all of you
check
sent
directly
to
your
bank,
You
are in the United States
ienn Queen didn' t play Saturday are invited to bring your wares and
now's
the
time
to
do
it.
Tbere
are
a
when
an
emergency
occurs, and a
evening as it quietly moved .past· spend the day in th e Diles Park
lot
of
reasons
why
this
is
more
conCanadian
or
Meltican
hospital is
Pomeroy. There were hundreds of area beginning at 8 a. m. \Vhilc
venient,
but
none
more
Important
closer
to,
or
substantially
more
~pie on hand to sec the new river ·those participating in O•e F:tnners'
your
funds
available
to
than
having
of
the
accessible
from
,
the
site
cruiser pass by. I can' t help but feel · Market will have to pay their sp."II.'C
you
even
when
you're
not
there
to
emergency
than
the
nearest
U.S.
that most nf them were a., disap- fee , those taking part in the onepointed as I when no music was . time Ilea market will not have to cash your checks. More than half of hospital that can provide the emerforthcoming from the impressive pay a fee to participate. II' you ' d Social Security beneficiaries gency services you need.
-You live in the United States
boat. The crowd on hand for the like to be a part of the Ilea market receive their checks throQgh "direct
deposit."
It
is
the
method
of
receivand
a Canadiw1 or·Mexican hospibnaL' s passing waited a long time just give Dennis Hockman aL ring·
to view tl1e boat and there was even at IJ(J2-4216.
a little tr,tllic jrun .after the Ameri·
can Queen passed by as people
Another proud momem for Mrs.
llc:tded back home.
Ruby Grueser of Min~rsvill~ who
That Ia eli: of calliope music was in Macon, Ga .. on June 12
Barber shop quartets continue to shall University will also perform.
appears to be not very good poblic where her granddaughter. Heidi thrive in this area, the
This event will be open to the
rcl:nions on the p,oart of someone, Grueser, was ordained tl'i a Ueacon Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary Club public.
I' m afrait.l .
Currently, more than 40 people
in tlu! South Georgia Conlerencc of learned at its receht meeting.
A
Gallipolis
chapter
began
in
attend
the weekly meetings at 7:30
The official date for the opening the United Methodist Church.
November
1994
and
has
expanded
p.m.
Tuesdays
at the Grace United
Rev. Grueser has been Jlo'L~tot of to Point Pleasant, W.Va., Middleof the annmd Middleport Far:ncrs'
Melluxlist Church in Gallipolis.
the · Valley United Methodist
Market will be Tuesctay, July 4.
port,
Pomeroy
and
Jackson,
said
E.
· Barber shop singing reached iL'
All are:1 fanners arc invitetl tn Church in Portsmouth but will Jay Sheridan , president of the peak at the eaxl of the 19th century,
;;Jkc part in tbe market which will leave the week for Frederica, Geor- French City Chapter of the Society Sheridan said.
rundion from g a.m . to 2 p.m .. gia, where she will serve as pastor for the Pres'ervation and Encour·
Numerous advOcates and p.-utic· .
l&gt;cginning July '4th and on each Sat- of the Wesley United Methodist agement of Barber Shop Qu.artet ipants are working to revive this
urday llmmgh October. These mar- Church.
type of singing, he added.
Heidi is the daughter of Ed and Singing in America.
kets m·e very successful in a nomHarber
shop
quartets
from
the
Denver Rice, a celebrated Inca!
her of communities ami lhere's no Sandy Grueser of Reynoldsburg
surrounding
area
will
perfonn
at
8
musiCian,
introduced Sheridan. Part
rc:""" why the one here can't be and granddaughter of Ruby and the p.m. Satunlay at the Ariel Theatre of
Sheridan
' s presentation
successful. TheNe markets are a late Charles Grueser.
in Gallipolis. Tbe national college involved tapes and videos of varinice atlvanlagc nnl only for lhe
July 4th is right on top of us. I champion quartet from the Mar- ous barber shop productions.
grower but for the consumer.
The mnrkel is to be lncm~d on see sparlders on sale in stores, but
the p:u·king lot between th~ Fmnily don ' t bother to buy any . Why
Dollar Store ;md Daw Diles 1&gt;11rk. should you? After all, you ARE a
sp.1rkler. And do keep smiling.
RADNOR, Pa. (AP) - Victoria
Thmcher is scheduled .to :1ppe•ar
Principal doesn't mind acting her at th~ National Press Club in Wa,hage, but hope.s her age won't end in gton tnday tu kick off a book tour
her acting.
for " Margaret Thatcher: The Path
Principal said she has II&gt; con- lo Power," th i seL·unll installment
The Community Calendar Is day, 9to noon, for the .1995,!16 sea- stantly fight 01e perception that WI of her hcsl-se lling memoirs.
·published as a free service to son. For more information band actress's career is over al age 40.
non-profit groups wishing to members may call 992·50 18.
BOZEMAN, Mont. (AP) Her latest role is a womml wrongly
announce meeting and special
institutionalized for depression in Next on Headline News: Ted Turncvcnls. The calendar Is not
RUTI.AND - Rutland Garden Lifet.ime' s July 5 muvie, " Dancing er wants wolves on his ranch , but
designed to p.rontote sales or Cluh, 7:30 p.m. Monday at home in the Dark."
not if they botl1er his bison.
fund raisers of any type. Items of Mrs. Anne Webster.
I I r rn Jl()f looking for acco•
" I' d especially like it if they
are ptintcd as space permits and
lades,'' _the 45-year-old former · cull ed some of the elk," Turner
cannot be guaranteed to run a
TUESDAY
" Dallas" star s'ays in the July 1 told the Bozeman D;tily Chmuiele
spedlic number of days.
POMEROY - A special meet· iss ue of TV Guide . " It feels so reccnlly during a discussion abour
iug of Drew W~bster Posi 3'1 , good to tinally approve of my own reintroducing wolves intu YellowMONDAY
Am erican Legion , Tuesday at 7 work. I love it so passionately, an~ stone Nnlinnal Park.
RACINE - Southern Local p.m. HI tl1e hall. All executive offi- it mllkes me so sad ~lat I may be
The owner of Cable News NetBoard of Education, regular meet· cers and .trust ee s are ask ed tp robbed of if in the not -too-distant work never met allison he didn ' t
i1ig, 7 p.m. Monday, high school.·
aucnd.
future.' '
like - in fac.t, he ~ays he is dnse
to reaching hiS goal nf prm.lm.: in~;POM EROY • Meigs County
Am erican
POMEROY
NEW YORK (AP) - . Fnrmer 2,000 bison calves ,., year at his
Ve teran s Service C ommi s~ ion, Legioll Auxiliary. Unit 39, Tuesday .B nlish Ptime Minister Margaret BO,OOO-acrc Flying D rru1cl1. .
. Monday, 7:30p.m. Veterans Ser- at I p.m. at 01e hall. . '
Thatc'11er says her con se rvative
But Turner is no f•m of cows.
vice Ofli ce in Pomeroy.
soulmale Ronald Reagan wa'i visi·
" Cattle are bred to be stupid,
RACINE - Racine Grange will bly alfecled by Alzheimer' s dhense la zy and fat. Anything that l."tzy
I'O MEROY - Th ~ Mei gs meet Tucsd.1y at 7 p.m. Obligation when she visited him last March.
gets fat," he said. " I have notJiiug
Mm·au&lt;lcr Band practice nn Mon - will he held for all new members.
" We didn' t t:~k sn much about ~1,gainst Callie mnc he rs. I just don'l
the pm~t . '' Thatcher sai&lt;.J in an itUer- like cows."
view pu blished in today 's USA
'
Tbday, but " he obviously recog·
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - 'll •~Y
nized me."
could call it the " Soul Dowl. "
" I think it is so very sad tn have
Arcll1n Franklin. G lildy~ Knight,
known ll•is very great man brought D.B. King, an~ Chanmrine Neville
down by this sad disease.' ·
Jessica Radford , a graduate of
cue among lhc musical supersw'rs,
Eastern High Sc hool, has been
selected as a member of t11e 1995
Ohio All State Academic Team,
which is sponsored by Bank One
and 1he Ohio Association of Second;lfy School Administrators.

tal is closer to , or substantially
more accessible from, your home
than the nearest U.S. hospital that
can provide the care you need , ·
regardless of wbether an emergen·
cy exists, and without regard to
where the illness or injury occurs.
· -You are in Canada traveling
by the most direct route between
Alaska and another state wben an
emergency occurs, and a Canadian
hospital is closer to, cit substantial·
ly more accessible from, the site of
the emergency than the nearest
U.S. hospital that can provide the
emergency services you need.
How to Increase benefits
There are three ways in which
your Social Security benefit can
mcrease: !)recomputation of your
benefits if you retire before age 65
and have months in which you did
not receive a check ; 2)earnings .

•

...

•

•..
~

••
•••

'.

~~:-:~=~~~~~~iy

Jessica Radford named to
Ohio All-State Academic team

Team members have been recognized for their outstanding academic performance a' well as lf?ldcrship in extracurricul ar activities
and citize nship.
Ohio Ail State Academic Te.'UH
members are seniors who must be
in the top live percent nf tl1eir cl:L"
and demm1s1ra1c ex trac urr h.: ul;u
lead~ r s hip
througho ut their
involvement in at least 1wo d uhs or
tc:ljns . Cit ize nship qualities arc
those that .promot~ pride, spirit anu-Jio
responsible leadership in 01eir hi gh
schools.
Radford was chose n for th e
award by a cmmnittcc ma&lt;le up of
the school's principal and 1wo

dren:

•.
~

. Many get direct deposit
Since 1976, Social Security beO:.
eficiaries have been able to bav~
their checks deposited directly 111
tlleir checlcing or saving accounts.
Today )JIOre than 52 percent of
beneficiaries have direct deposit.

'

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t

teachct~.

"llauk O•ie is delighted to be a
pari or the Acooemic Team for the
second consecutive year," said Des
Jeffers, Bank One loan nllicer.
"We are proud to he a'socia ted
wi th an award 01a1 recognizes students for their perf&lt;innance in the
classroom.

...

JlARBER SHOP SINGING -The Middleport/Pomeroy Rotary
Club learned about area barber shop groups. Rotary's Denver
Rice, right, intr~Hioces the guest speaker, Dr! E. Jay Sheridan.
Sheridan is the president of the Gallipolis chapter of harher shop
IJUDrlels.
are set to appear next weekend in
the Crescent City's First Annual
Essence Music Festivnl celebmting
the contribution of black culture to

music.

CHICAGO (AP) - Childr~ n · s
author Katherine Paterson says sbe
doesn ' t lee! it's her duty to write ·
14

nice" slorics.

"My job when I write a novel i~ ••
Also scheduled to perform m t11e n111 to he nice ... but to tell 01e truth
three-day lesliv•~ that st:arts Satur- as best I know how," the aw:ardday are Luther Van&lt;lross, Anita winning author said in a speech t(&gt;
Baker, Boyz ll Men, Queen Lati· the Am~ric:m Libniry Assnciar,~, . !'alii LalJclle, the Dixie Cups
tinn's convention on Sunday .
·
and Kidd Jord.1n. ·
.
"Ev~ry fonn of popular music
Paterson's
work has frequently
has been inlluenced by the culture
appeared
on
the
library associa·
- the blues, gospel, jazz, R&amp;D linn
'
s
list
or
books
people hav e
and tl1e rhythms that were brought
to
ban.
tried
to America." said one of tl•e·festi Paterson ' s "Bridge to Terval' s promoters, George Weill.
nbithia,"
which wtm the Ncwbcry
.
•'And we should celebrate it. With·
MjWal
in
'1977,
is nn~ of them . II
out th~ contribution w1d intcrmin·
contains
profanity
a11d d~als witb
gling of cultures, we'd he at a dead
the
dent!•
of
a
child.
·
.place musically ."
"All
of
us
can
lhink
of a lxx&gt;k
Essence Magazine, celebrating
...
that
we
hope
non~
of
our chilits 25ih anniversnry , is the fesli ·
dr~n
or
any
other
children
have
v,al' s ma·n
( 1 .s·pon•·or
,., .
taken orr the shelf," Pnlcrs&lt;Hlsaid.

J ESSICA RADFORD

MHS Class of '60 holds
35th reunion recently

Edw:ards, Gallipolis; Ronnie Wilt ,
The Middleport Hig h School
Lancasler; Ronnie Evans. Col umClass of 1960 cclebraled its 35th
bus; Marimme Woodgerd, Columnmnion wilh a gat he ring in the
bus; Dick and Loretta Han ning
social room of the Middleport Fire
Department on th e Sat urday of
Roller, Belpre; Jerry Fry, Mon tgomery, Ala:; Jeffrey Kokovitch.
Memorial Day weekend.
Gilbert, Arizona; Roger Bennett,
Barbara Stiles Fry, Pomeroy,
Monroe, L1.; Olivia Bowles Lock·
and Ruth Farmer Boyer, Middleport. co-hosted the gatiJCring. Dec- • e ll, Shaker Heights; Lynn ·
Buchanan Kitchen; MasMI, W. Va ..
urntions included orange and black
Carter French, Kissi mmee, Fla.;
hal l&lt;K&gt;HS, Streluncrs andtablccloiJIS.
Phyll is Hilbert Towns ley, FayetAttending were Dennis a nd
tevi lle; and Earl McKinley, Mid·
Doris Walburn, Beverly; Ral~ h
dle)i&lt;&gt;rt.

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408 MAIN ST.
POINT PLEASANT, WV

rowel." ·
· Those groups and individuals
recognized were: Steve Dunfee,
BankOne; Tom Grueser, Meig s
County Fish and Game Association ; Gary R. Dill, Izaak Walton
League; and Tom Hayman, Forked
Run Sportsmen Club.
· Tht; Meigs County Board of
Commissioners also gave an addi·
tional $10,000 10 help tl•c village
cover itS $21,000 in local match for
the $142,800 project, he added.
Anonymous donors raised about
$50,000 to refurbi sh t)le vill age
p()()l,"fn 'liiltlition to $60,000 from a
recent state grant, Horton said. The
"42-year-old, above-ground pool
needs electrical and support work.
The village will hire Mike
Strotb for $10,000 to compl ete
architectural work for the pool.
In olher business, several resi·
dents from th e Di amond and
Hobart Street area complained
about tl1e hedges and fences on the
Charles Stewatt property that hang
on the road.
' A fi re tru ck that tried to enter
the street last week could barely
access it and was forced to back
ontO North Second Avenu e, residents said.
"I was up there a co uple day s
ago," Horton said. adding Stewart

1 Section, 10 Pa9Q 35 centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, June 27, 1995

Middleport
hails launch
supporters

a

REGULAR EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES

SET UP

Vol. 46, NO. 41
Copyright 1995

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Editor
An $85,000 grant from the Federal Avi ation Administration .will
allow the Gallia-Meigs Reg ional
Airport Aut11ority to draft a master
plan for new airport to serve botll
counties.
The grant was announced Monday by author ity memb ers and
county comm issioners at a press
confere nce spon sored by the
Regional Economic Development
Association.
·
Based on a feasibi lit y stud y
completed in 1993, th e authority
has chosen a site off State Route
850 ·be tween Rodney and Bidwell,
· comm onl y kn own as the Watson
site, as the best locati on for a new
airport, ofl1cials said.

OFF

• MasterCard • Visa • Discover
• Heilig-Meyers Card • In-Store Credit

We reserve the righllo limit quantities. 'Heilig-Meyers Co. 1995
'I

Low toDigbt In 60s. Partly
doudy. Wednesday, sh-trs.
HJclu In mld-801.

•

Athens
man dies
.in storm

'""-

,
...
must .lrim the area.
. ·~
,; ,r., R · .f\:, ..
.
1.- ...- -~'In ot~ e r action, the council
~.' ...... -.# ! ..\'-'"'
.......
. .f
approved an amenwuent that will
stiffen penal Lies against residents
who do not tile tax limns. Also, a
late filing fee of $25 will be
asse ssed after the April 30 due
date.
At next month's meeting, tbe
council will finalize the village
trash hauling contract, since coun·
SUPPORTING WESTMORELAND- Severaltri-county residents rallied Monday in support
cil members have had copies of the
of
Dr. Danny Westmoreland. Westmoreland's Mason, W.Va., office was raided by federal officontract for a month, Horton said.
cials
Friday who s.ized more than 21HI patient records. No arrest• were made or charges filed and
Council passed the third and
'
the office remain• open. (OVP photo)
tina! readi11g of a 15-year Contract
with Cablevision . The cable com ·
pany is continuing to install fiber
optic cable before removing old
lines, said J. Da11iel Elias of Cablevision .
.
Th e re ception of numerous •
channels should be improved, Elias
said. '
MASON, W.Va. - More 0JaJI rant at the cli nic, dclai ning work - the am oun t of love and support
In other recreation news, the
100 residents from the lri-county crs. and patie ms. They blocked the people showed him.
miniature golf course bas 15 or 16
The uoctor said a Hunti ngton
area filled tlie parking lot of the the entrance 10 the cli nic, keeping
of the 17 holes pledged to be set in
Westmoreland Family Care Cen·
patient s frnm the buil din g mos t te lev ision stat ion said ir had w
concrete by are,a businesses, said
1er Mond ay in supp ort o f Dr.
of rhe d.1y.
"look and look and look'' Friday .
Arnold Johnson of the recreation
Danny Westmore la nd , who se
Calls we re made l&gt;y the OVP
before newscasters could fi nd
departmen t.
·
so meo ne to say so1pething bad
offices were raided by federal 10 the U.S. mtnrney's office Mon"We' ve got all the ~ upplies . We
officials Friday.
day. but were not ret urned . A aboul hi m, becau se il fell it had to
need l~qo r," Arnold sa id . Nex t
Many of those support ing the reliable source said no charges
present both si des of'tl w story.
year, passes may be used 'for both
doctor came armed wilh Ameri· have been fil ed and no arres ts .WOWK -TV showed a wnm:1n
the pool and the golf course, be .
crurllags, banners and signs.
were made. Whil e it is unknown speaking out against Wcsllnoreadded.
"We 'rc here to support him," whnt tl1e ofticials arc looking for, land in a weekend newscast, hut
Currently , contractors arc 100
said George VanM lll re of Mason. ahout 200 to 23 0 pati ent files
the woman was d.1rkeneu anu did
busy to complete the concrete
"I don' t think I hey .shoul d have were sei7.ed during' the raid. ·
not relei!se her identity.
work. Arnold said.
.
come in on him like thm."
Wes un oreland appeared from
The station w as crilicized by
Councilm an Mick Childs said
VanMatre
sa
id
his
whole
fmnhis
practi
ce
fo
llowing
tl1
e
ch:mls
those
rallying Monday, ch:mling
volunteers will be sought to run the
ily a tte~ided th e rall y.
and cheers of supp011ers. He I old
ro !he cam emman !hat they woulu
golf course when it opens later this
"We've bee n go i ng to Dr. !hem as had and t~rr i ble an d s!Hiw th eir laces in 1hc doctor's
summer.
Westmore
land for ni ne year's ,
wron£ as the mill was, Mason is
support.
In oth er business. the vill age
ever
since
he
came
here.
I
don't
still
the
only
place
in
the
world
Wesllno rcland said his offi ce
currelllly is working across town
think
he
did
anyLh
ing
wro
ng.
I
he
could
imagi
ne
livi
ng
in:
remai
ns open, ad din g tha t h e
cleaning lhe surface water catch
don't
know
how
he
could
have."
H~
sn
id
th
at
e
ve
n
th
bugh
it
even
saw
a few pa1icn1.1 ove r the
ba, ins, Horton said.
Federal
offices,
iriclu&lt;.ling
tlJe
was
wro
ng
and
he
wo
ul
d
have
weckenu
in
need of medical trea t·
- Bob's Market and Mitch' s ProDrug
Enforcement
Agency,
Interrecou
rse
later,
it
is
things
like
U
1
is
1
.ne111
.
·duce were thru1ked for tlower donanat Re venue Service-Cri minal that people have to go through to
Wes tm o reland sai d he has
tioiJS for Dave Diles Park and
Investi
gations
Division
an
PoSi
al
have
to
enjoy
hiL&lt;
ic
freedoms.
heen
ad vised by his auomey not
around village hall, Horton said .
Inspectors,
and
Ole
West
Virgin
ia
Fo
ll
owi
ng
th
e
ra
ll
y,
West"
to
di
sc
uss any details of the raid
Mary Wise, Marilyn Anderson and ·
(Continued on Page 3) LJS~t~at~e~P~o~l~ic:·~s~
e ·e~~~e~d~.~" l~se~·,o~wc~h~~~;;'n;o;rc;l;a•;•d;;sru;·;d:h:e;c:o=u~ld~nf'~t=be=·l;ie;v:e:::o:r:::::::~~~~--------.J
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•

Mason residents show
support in wake of raid

FAA awards grant to G-M airport
authority to develop master plan

12 NOON Tl LL .8:00 PM

and

Pick 3:
387
Pick 4:
1286
BuckeyeS:
1-9-16-32-34

Sports, Page 4

.By GEORGE ABATE
Sentinel News SlaiT
Middleport Village Council
Monday honored area groups who
donated money to help save a boat
launch grant
Tbe launch facility - a tloating
dock, a wider ramp and a new
boater parking lot - will benelit
village, county and regional residents, Mayor Dewey Horton said.
"It's great that people responded
to the needs of the community,"
Horton said . "The village was in
· dire circumstances a year ago. We
were about ready to throw in the

TUESDAY, JUNE 27TH ONLY!!
R;1dford graduated fi fth in her
class and she ·plans to attend Ohio
State University this fall where she
·plans to study phys ica l' therapy .
Her activities and honors include:
vice pres ide nt National Hon or
Snciety, president of senior class,
student council, varsity volley ball,
varsi ly basketball, Future Farmers
of America. English Award, Gnvenunent Award, Art AwaJ·d, Physical Education Award and the
Drama Award.

Indians
end slump,
lose hurler

?

·ed if
Almost 43 nialllon personl
receive Social Security benefits~
one in six in the population. They
include 26.4 million retired worlc;
ers; 4 million disabled workers; 5.1
million widows/widowers; 3.3 mil;,
lion spouses; and 3.6 miilion chiL:

--Names in the news--

·Community calendar

Ohio Lottery

while you are receiving benefiiS:
that are higher than the lowest o(
the years used to compute you~
benefit; and 3) delayed retirement
credits for each year after 65 yo~
delay retirement. In each case ben .
efits are automatically recomputa '

Dr. Sheridan discusses barber shop quartets at Rotary

I

'.

"

The mas ter plan, to be devel·
oped by Woolpert. &amp; Associates."·
Dayton, and th e Cincinnati -based
Airport Techll ology and Planning
Group Inc., will set the exact property needs lor :u1 airport and evaln·
ate historical, noise and envi ron·
mental issues surroundi ng the site,
explained Larry Beebe, the authority's secretary.
Beebe said the co nsul k1n[l; are to
suart work on l11e plan in Se ptember
and have it compl eted wi thi n 10
mont11s,

"It will take an additional eight
to 10 years 10 complete OIC faci lity," he ex plained. Aft er the plan is
completed, the pr~ject's next phase
wo ul d l&gt;egi n in 1997 or 19'18,
Beebe added.
"A t'lerwatd , it 's hard to say

sa LU the storms Uumred aboUI an

inch of rain per hour for tl1ree to
four hours in so me areas. ·Flash
.fl ood wal ches were in effect for
most of northern and central Ohio.
Befo re da wn , wa ter covered
some low-lying area~ and portions .
of roads. Some und erpasses in
Columbus were flooded but caused
no signifi ca nt rus h-hour traffic
prob lems. The Delaware Co unt y'
sheriff s offi ce said parts of U.S. 23
and Ohio 315 were under water but
passable. ·
Colum bus So uth ern Power
spokes woma n Ma ry Flint said
li gh lnin g strikes lo th e utility' s
equ ipment and do wn ed lin es
kn oc ked o ut se rvice to abo ut
70,000 customers e:\rly today. Service ha d been res to red to a ll but
about 17,000 by 8:30a.m.
More ·thunderstorms we re- pre·
dicled today and tonight.
.
On Monday, swrms kn oc ked
out power in northwestern Ohio

just as utiHty crews ca ught- up from

oulagcs tl1e day hcfore.
The weath er also was blamed
tor tlJc death of a man volunteering
at the O'Bicncss Memorial Hospi"
tal Chant y gn ll to urnamen t in
Atl•ens.
·
Dent C. Dailey, 68, of Alhens,
was killed when lightning struck a

lree at the Al hens Cnunlry Club.
' The tree fell onto a nearby ten r
where Dailey had ~Jken shel ter. He

was hil on the head by a two-inch
piece ot sted pipe !hat was 'upporting tJ1c tent , Athcn~ C'ounry

Coroner Rnhen lJuus 'md .
. The weather abo m;1y have

slart cd a fire thai de&gt;troyeu an
apan me nl complex in Toledo on
Monday . Several people said !hey
saw li ghtning hit the Telewnnd
ApartmenL&lt;; .'

Inadequate data
delays mill permit

what tl1e outcome will he, but typi·
cally, 1l1e project will involve prop·
eny evaluation," he added.
T he m ilsle r p lan wou ld se l an

eotimated cosl for construction, bu t
at th.is poi nt the tola l wou lu be
be1wce n $ 10 and $ 11 million,
Bcehtl said.
Pulllic participaliOII in the pro·
cess is encouraged and lJccbc said
the aut hnrily would schedu le tl1ree
puhlic hearings to gatlJer inpul and
am:wcr questions.
The· current airport , OflCI\CJ in
1967, is 4,000 fect long - 500 feet
short of tl1c minimrun lengtl1 now
expected by aircraft insurers.
Beebe said. Because the. •ri'rporl is
in a noodplain, it cannot be funded
for improvements, and e(Jm merc~11
(Co nt inued on Pa~e 3)

By The Associ~ted Press
Thunderstorm s in Ohio early
today kn\)Cked out powerto an estimmed 70,000 homes and businesses in central Ohio and ca used rural
and uroan Oooding.
·
The National Weather Service

MASTER J&gt;LAN GRANT um ,

exec uti v~

R:V. "ll tiddy" Graham, a t podi·

di rector of t he Re gional Economic DeveJopment

Associat ion, announced Monday that the Gallia-Meigs l! eginnal
Ai rp&lt;Jrt Author ity had bee n awarded an $85,000 grant to de,·elop a
m aster pl a n fur a new airport.

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP)
- A company that ww1ts to build a
pulp mi ll in Mason County h:t&gt; provided incomp lete emissions data,
delayi ng its air pollution permit,
according to Sk1 te reg ulators.
The Division o( Environmental
Proteclion wants Parsons &amp; Wh ittemore Inc. of Rye Brook, N.Y., to
answer questions about its proposed $1.1 billion mill in. Apple
Grove. The company cannot stan
building until it obtain' the air J&gt;Ol·
lotion pelll)il .
In a letter Friday to the company, Dale Farley, chief or the Office
of Air Quali ty, said Parsons &amp;
Whittem.o re mus1 provide figures
on

em1~stons .

Besieged ARC details.assistance
given to Meigs County projects
The Appalac hian . Regiona l
Commission. under tire in the congressional move Lo reduce the
defici t, has helped Meigs County to
the tune of almost $2.3 mil lion,
aecording to ARC ofticials.
Since 1969, Meigs County has
received $2,259,865. in ARC funding for 23 projects, Including eight
proj ects for Veterans Memorial
HospiL11 prior to 1976, according to
ARC figures. Six of the other projects have involved exp•msion of
water or sewer lines.
Fred Hoffman. president of the
' Meigs County Boar~ of Commissioners and former long-ti me
mayor of MiddleporL. the county's
largest village. said the ARC h a~

$70,000 tl1is year.
helped the cou nty.
The ARC was created by
. "lt' s a good progi'IID!," he said.
Congress
in 1965 to address iilfms·
Several 'projec ts have received
tructurc
problems
in Appalachia.
assistance from tl1e ARC. projecll
According to ARC spokeswom·
the county may have otherwise had
:m Ann M. Anderson, the prognun
to go without, he said.
County projects receiving assis- serves the needs of 21 million resi ·
tance inc lude a long-term care unit, dents in a 195,000-square-milc area
Vetera ns Memorial Hospital. a that fo llows the spine of the·
solid waste disposal syst.em, a ·, Appalachia n Mountains from
VMH home healrh servic~ pro- southern New York 1&lt;&gt; northern
gran\, a mine training program and Mississippi .
Of Appalachia's 399 counties,
an addition to the VMH emergency
room. In addition, several water 115 are classified as severely dis·
and sewer projecas received fund· tressed: their per capita incomes
are less than two-thirds of the
mg.
The last en terprise funded was national average; povcny rare.~ are
the ongoing Pomeroy Downtown at least 150 percellt of the national
(Continu ed on l'uge 3)
Revitalizat.iun Project, which netted

'

.

•

POMERO Y DEVELOI'MENT ~Part of the
former MGM lot on East Mam Street in
l'omeroy will be used as the site for a new build·
ing to house Dollar General, now located rlowntnwn. Todd Johnson and Jim Jnhn.&lt;nn are seen

laying the fi rst hloeks to the project. The subcontracto r will place between S,OOO and 6,000
blocks, Johnson said. See story on Page 3. (Sen·
tinel photo by George Abate)

••

�"'\.

Tu•dly, June :n, 11115

=C ommentar
•

montbS of vituperation
between Republicans in Congress
and friends or public broadcastina.

both sides remain miles apart, and

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
CaaenJ Manager

MARGARET LEHEW
ControUer

LEI lEkS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls long. All letters are subject to editing and must be s1gned with name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned leuers will be published. Letters
should be in sood taste, addressing issues, oot personalities.
·

Divided Democrats
By JILL LAWRENCE
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A puzzled caller to a talk sbow Ibis monlb.bad an
interesting question: "Why aren't lbe Democrats sticking with the president on the budget and lben working it out with him later?"
Republicans appear poised for yet another display of spectacular party
disclpllne. They smoolbed over sbarp differences about lbe size and timing of tax cuts and are rallying behind a budget compromise llkely to pass
Congress Ibis week.
By contrast, President Cllnton's declaration of fiscal independence
continues to reverberate on Capitol HUI, underscoring tensions between
Democratic liberals and moderates as well as lhe divergent polltical goals
of a chief executive anl! a con~oressional minority.
The latest Republlcrut budget, with its d~_atic changes in the scope of
Medicare and Medtcrud as well as taxes, umhes Democrats at least temporarily against a large target.
·
But the deeper mood was summed up by a Freudian slip from Rep.
Davtd Bonier, lbe No. 2 Democrat in lbe House. He satd Clmton proposed his own version of a balance~I budget in order l? "l.al~ .about some
of lbc issues lbat contrasted the posttion of our party wttlt hiS.
Some House Democrats do sound unsure about whelbcr Utey still share
a 'party wiUJ Uteir president. "He feels more comfortable witlt Republicans lban !bose that supported him andgot him elected," sai4 Rep.
Charles Rangel , 0-N.Y.. 111 parttal answer to Ute CNN talk-show callers
'
·
.
question.
Rangel and albers were infuriated UJ.at Utey were not consulted m
advance aboutlt;linton's prorosal to cut mtddle-cla&lt;s taxes, tnm Medtcare
and erase Ute deficit in 10 years.
"When you're hunkered down in the tren~hes, you've got ~~.have
good communication. And the commumcatton s been pretly bad, srud
Rep. Bob Wtse, D-W.Va. He.hatl .excoriated .thc GOP's propos~! to
extract billions in Mcd1care savmgs m a speech JUSt hours before Clmton
floated his own cul&lt;.
Yet the suspicion and non-communication goes boUt ways. Several
lawmakers recalled House Minority Leader Dick Gephardt's sudden
announcement of a middle-class tax-cut proposal just bel ore Clinton was
· scheduled to announce his own plan.
"We've done terrible lbings to him, too," says Rep. Gerry Studds, DMass. "We~re going to be a minority indefinitely if we don't get some
discipline and act like a team.' '
ClmiOn's chief defentlers these days are centrtsl "New Democrats"
• who strongly recommended to him a little over a month ago Ulat he offer
: mt alternative to the emerging GOP spending plan.
:
"lie's nut Ute prestdent of the Senate. He's not the president of lbe
· House. He's Ute president of Ute United States. He has to appeal to a larger group than Congress,'' said one of Utem, Sen. John Breaux .. D-La
Clinton's logic, according to a Whtte House offtctal wlio spoke on
contlition of anonymity, is that "he got elected to lead Ute country :md get
Stuff tlone. People don't want to hear bickering and whining, Utey want to
.. sec some perfonnance ''
~
Breaux and oUlers affiliated wiUJ Ute centrist Democratic Leadership
~ Council contend Climon can &lt;&gt;nl¥ (win re-election by moving bey?_nd
advocacy of tratlitional Democra.llc-,prog~runs and mterest groups. I he
inevitable result, U1ey say. 1s confl1c~-W1th liberal House members.
•'His Job is to lead Ute country. Theirs is to prmect programs an~ ,trY to
appeal to usually homogeneous consllluenctes to get re-elected. satd
DLC presitlcnt AI From "A congressman can sa~ 'Look, those mean
guys tried to cut your Medtcare anti I s top~ed H. The ~restdent as a
national leader has got to be part of Ute soluuon to try to ltx 11. Because
he'll get blamed if it goes bankrupt. '.'
.
Some House members are grudgmgly ncknowlcdgmg Utat Chnton was
"entitled to put down a m~ker rutd make his case to Ute public, One even
ignored a talk-show host s advtce to provok~ Ute audtence by auackmg
Clinton's proposal to slow the growtlt of Medtcare.
Most of Ute whtte-hot rage wa~ coohng down to Ute usual free-floatmg
1nistrus1 last week when Clinton hosted a White House picnic for members of Congress.
,
· According to gue&amp;L~. Ute event ~as crowded rutd Utere was a 90·n:u~ute
wait to shake hands witlt the prestdent. Some people who had cnuctzed
Clinton in Ute moming were seeking his autograph in tlte evening. Among
the party-gocrs was Rep. David O~y. D-Wis., who had ISSUed a parttcu- .
larly harsh statement on Ute new Clinton butlget.
' "Everybody 1 a~k.ed was going. I found Utat amazing," recalled Rep.
Kwe 1si Mfume, D-Md. But he stayed home. Why? "I dtdn't want to be a
hypocrite.''

..

the existence of a national treasure
remains in jeopllflly.
~ How far apart Uley are was illus·
'ifated recently at Ute annual summer planning meeting of public 1V
station general mana11ers •. where.a
session was started off With a chp
from the NBC show "Sisters"
Jampoonmg House Sr,;aker Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga., as 'Newt Gao·
grene," the Jack Kevorkian of public broadcasting.
Gingrich spokesman Tony
Blankley was not amused. "Wben
Genghis Khan mvaded a territory,"
Blankley observed,- "he bandied
villages in two ways. Tbose which
yielded were spared. Those whtch
resisted were wiped out. You'd
Ulink public broadcasti~g w~?ld
want to be one of Ute survtvors. ·
Gingrich ru1d oUter Republicans.
such as Reps. Jack Fields (Texas)
and Scott Klug (Wis.), say lbat Utey

actually want to preserve public
bfoadcasting by prlvati:lling it,
while defenders of lbe system say
that GOP proposals will lead to a

Morton Kondractce
collapse of the system and a "fire
sale" of slations ali around the
country.
Fields, chairman of the commerce telecommunications sub·
committee, says that he ami Klug
are about two weeks away from
offering a bill embodying their
ideas. Also in July, a House appropriations subcommittee beaded by
Rep. Jobn Porter, R-111., is sched·uled to mark up public broadcasting's fiscal 1998 funding bill. Presumably, it will show a cut from
the $260 million Congress
approved for 1991 and the $286
million for Ibis year.
If-the GOP and executives of
PBS and its funding agency, the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting , are serious about saving the

a total wasteland of munch, triviali-

system, perhaps hearings ought to
be launched witlt TV clips contrasting PBS shows with competing
commercial programs.
Take a recent schedule, for
instance. While PBS was playing
"Kidsongs" and "Barney' in the
morning, on network TV "Jerry '
Springer" was exploring "cheating
lovers," and ''Days of Our Lives"
was dramatizing them . CNN, of
course, featured O.J. ·
The prime-time PBS offering,
the opera "EI Gato Montes," competed wiUJ "Hot Summer Soaps"
on ABC and the sex-and-angst
series "Pany of Five" on Fox.
When Ulat part of the bearing is
over, the committees should review
and contrast the offerings of
National Public Radio - the
nation's only dependable electronic
connection to world events and culture- witb commercial radio.
The purpose of lbese exercises,
of course, would be to expose parties on botb sides to the potential
future without public broadcasting;

..

ty and stupe~actioll. Gin~dr, dell!·
cated as be ts to renewmg American civilization. couldn't oontemplale IUdr ll'utunl COIIIfMilbty.
If they are terrified enough of
the prospects, perhaps the two sides
can call a truce and rationally consider lbe options. If tbey do. lbe
most logical outcome would seem
to be a five- to I 0-year "~lide
path" for public broadcasung's
appropriation from its currept level ·
while privatization options are
explored.
A Lehman Brolbers study done
for CPB does not support assertions by Klug and Fields lbat public
broadcasting can become selffinancing by selling advertising, ,
consolidating stations, and using
advanced digital tecbnolosy to
"split" PBS stations' sbare of lbe
electromagnetic spectrum for sale
or lease, at least not anytime soon.
The study indicat~d lbat sucb
devices might raise at most $172
million by 2000, and possibly ouly
$100 million.
Almost certainly, Fields and
Klug will insist lbat no more than
one PBS statton serve a given
media market - San Francisco
now has II stations, Wa&lt;hington,
Utree - but it's not dear how Utat
will raise money for the network,
since stations are owned by local
aulllprilies, often universities.
I
Other money-making options
also are complicated, such as sta. tion "swaps'" (for a price) of
choice VHF dial rositions for high' cr-numbercd UHF ones and purchase by commercial stations of
relief from s~1tutory requirements
to carry children's and public inter. est programming.
In answer to Fields and Klug's
request for options, PBS and NPR
crune up with proposals to create a
feder:tl "trust fund" of sever:tl billion dollars whose interest would
make up the system's annual
appropriation. However, Fields and
Klug JUst wrote a letter saying Utat
any taxpayer -financed fund was
''impossible.' •

•

W.VA.

------· _______ ___________,
,

No break seen in Ohi·o 's
stormy w.e ather pattern

Norman Milam

Local News in Brief:

Man pleads to welfare theft

(Morton Kondracke is executive editor of Roll Call, the news)llt)ler of Capitol Hill.)

Flag-flappers don't deserve to _
serve
I. The :unendment is not needed. It lm s been on the right-wing
agenda since a 1989 Supreme
Court ruling - in a case involving

Joseph Spear

is it.

a wotm nruned Gregory Lee JohnOK, so I got carried away lllere. son and a group of kindred worms
Let me restate my opinion': I lllink called Ute Revolutionary Commuthe proposed flag -desecration niSt Youth Bngade who burned a
runentlmelll tu Ute Constitution is a flag arthe 1984 GOP National
dcfiniuve tssue, one that clearly Convention in Dallas - Utat peodelineates the difference between ple may de111e Uteir own flags witlt
leaders and shameless opportunists. unpunity.
Put me in charge and ru1y lawmaker
The First Amendment protects
who votetl for tt would be crumed.
speech, t11e Court said, and bunting
No matter where they swnd on the fla g ts :.- pure a demonstrahon
soc.al or economic tssues, no mat- of poliltcal speech as can be
ter where Utey come down on bud- thought up lntleed, wrote Justice
gets and deficits and pollution and Anthony Kennedy, the "flag propeanut subStdtes, if they voted in tects those who holt! tt 111 confavor of tlus unnecessary. wrong· tempt."
,
headed resolution Uta! cheapens Ute
You would've thought, judging
s·acred and pnstme pnnciples on from Lhe howls ol uflendcd jlOis.
which this nation wa&lt; founded, llle that the natwn was about to
hell with them. Joe Spear woultl become one b1g bonfire ol burning
gtve !hem the boot.
flags It tlitln't happen. American
There. you sec? I mn perfectly Untv crsity history professor
capable of engaging in tlispasswn- Thomas Dibacco says there have
ale dlscourse on this maHer I can been "maybe a dozen .. incidents
even gtve you U1rce supremely rea- since 198'1. "probably less."
soned arguments for Uunktng the
2. The :unemlment would deseway I do:
crate Ute Conshtulton. Never t11 Ute

204"year history of the Bill Ill
Rights has it been :unended. It is
the envy - most espectally the
free speech and lree press rrovl·
sions - of !ltc whole worltl It is
simple, direct, unsullied. We do not
need an astensk beside !he First
Amendment to protect the flag
from the scurvy miSfit.' wiMl would
bum 1l.

3. The amendment is being
exploited largely by charlatruts and
mountebanks . I have to allow for a
few exceptions here: Bob Dole,
who was almost killed in Wo(ld
War II and whose cmollons understandably becloud hts logic; Strom
Thurmond, who, at age 92, is not
the capital's clearest Utinker; Sonny
Bono, Ute contents of whose crani um, I fear, resemble a plate of
refried beans.
But othcts- Republicrut Senator Orri n Hatch of Utah, Rep.
Jnmes Traficant, D-Oino, Rep
Gerald B.ll. Solomon, R-N.Y., to
name but a few - arc litUe more
lban wintlbags in search of stumps
from which Utey c:m trumpet Uteir
patriotism.
I remember a day during the
first fl ag crisis 111 1989 when
Congress was repea~ng the pledge
of al legiance and Solomon spoiled

two young reporters in the press
gallery above who were engroSSCl)
in something Utey were reading and
shouted from the House floor:
"L6ok, look. two members of Ute
media Who are not standing !H I'm
sorry. bul Utis creep is hereby nominated lor Ute Association of Sagacious Punuits " Posturing ASP
award.
Wltat we need is leadership.
What we need lrom Utose in whose
custody we ltave entrusted our
rights ts an etlucatmn on the subtleties of llle First Amendment. We
need to be toltlthat speech is eitlter
free or 1t tsn' l, that there are no
halfway measure's, that the toler:lllcc of offensive, repugnant
speech is, md ccd, the truest measure of our belief in Ute principle.
What we get, instead, arc gutless
llag-llarpers who would barter Ute
Bill of Rtghts for a few votes.
Drunn, Utey disgust me.
Sorry for Ute apatlty. Some days
J just can' t get into il.
Joseph Sjlear is a synsicated
writer for Newspaper Enterprise

None injured in blaze

No one was injured when fire broke out in a Middleport home
Monday night, Middleport Volunteer Fire Ch1ef David Hoffman
said.
Garnet Marcum, 212 S. Fifth Ave .• had about $5.000 in damage
to her bedroom, but flames were contained to Ibis room, Hoffman
said. A window air conditioner lbat short-circuited caused Ute fire .
The ftre broke out about7:13 p.m. and 12 Middleport ftrcfighters
and four Pomeroy firelighters responded to Ute scene.

Two hurt in Pomeroy wreck
A Syracuse youtlt swerved his pickup truck to miss a dog and
broke a telephone pole Monday, according to Pomeroy Police
Department records.
Jason E. Counts, 16, and passenger Weston Counts, 6, were
transported lo Velerans Memorial Hospital by PQmeroy emergency
squads. BoUt were later treated and released, according to a nursing
supervisor.
Counts was drivmg north on Mulberry Avenue near Pomeroy
Elementary School when he btt lbe role at9: 13 p.m., records show.
Counts' 1993 T&lt;&gt;yota truck had heavy damage to Ute right quarter panel, report~ said

Pomeroy stand burglarized

Association.

Several items were stolen from a Pomeroy Youth League concession stand over the weekend, according to Pomeroy Police
Deparanem reporL~.
Someone entered Ute structure by breaking two windows in lbe
concession stand between Saturday afternoon and Monday morning,
records show

(For information on how to

communicate electronically with
this colunmist and others, contad America Online by calling 1800-827-6364, ed. 8317.)

·Forked Run fling planned

Jackson strange, nation shocked!
I didn't watch Diane Sawyer's
interview with Michael Jackson.
Before Utis dubious coup, however.
I did read Liz Smith's interv1ew
with Diane ·sawyer. Liz (breath·
lessly): "Why d1d you want to do
this mtervtcw - ratings aside?"
Diane (s tudi ously ): "I think he

?",,,......
~

poses such a fascinating set of

questtons about Ute deal you make
when you become a celebrity of his
magnitude ... "
And blah blah blah ...
When Ute media ask Ute media

-

--

t•• ......

about what to ask a media tigure,

Uta!' s as far as I go m pursuit of Ute
so-called truth.
As lor Mr Jackson himself, m
Ute aftennaUt of Ute Diane Sawyer
interview, U1e consensus sull seems
to be Utat he· s weird. Thank God
for Ute lnfonnation Highway! Now
Utis amazing insight is available to
everybody!
The fans of Michael Jackson
don't care if he's weird . Perhaps
his weirdness is part of h1s appeal
. As for his alleged shady sexual
behavior, I would submit Utat like
Ute rest of us he is innocent until
proven gUilty. And despite
(because of. some might say) .the
insinuations of payoffs to posstble
victims, Mr. Jackson ha~ yet to be
accused of anytlting except megalomrulia.

••

q;:...:_~
0 1W5 by NEA, lrw:

•1 have three months to live? NO! NO! NO! I'll
probably, never know how the 0. J. trial comes out. •

In Utm regard. hello'l He's a star,
fo lks. Relentless and shame less
sell-rrummion ar~ part of stardom.
Meg:~omania to us is self-rreserva·

tal1sm. Unlike oU1cr products a sUtr
can chaugc its 11a1ure at rant.lom:
The

famous

comedian

can

"strerch" 1in a serious role, the
rocker can tlo a ballad, Ute drunken
movie star crut soher up Imagine a
cheeseburger deciding it wants to
be broccoli. Imagine a personal
tion In ltis ilk . True. his latest computer expressmg self"doubt
bt7.:UT~ video is remwiscent or Nazi
about tts central processing unit, or
propaganda, bul remember that Chevron detiding to chuck intemal
HtUer wanted 10 conquer tbe world; combustion, hitch around Ute counall Jackson wants to do is sell try, and get1ts head togetlter.
.
recortls. If we crut't tell Ute ditTerI remember readmg that AD BA
encc between dreams ol emrire was equal only to Volvo as a
and tlreams uf an entertainment Swedish moncymaker. But when
empire. we're in deep trouble.
ABBA broke up, its members went
As far as freakiShness goes, is on to oUter careers. A Volvo cannot
he any more freakish lban Diane go on to oUter things. A Volvo ts a
Sawyer? M1chael Jackson at least sturdy veh1cle for the upwardly
doesn 't condescend to his audi- mobile cultural elite, and thus it
ence Deluded he may be, but he will always be. James Bond will
speaks tl1rcctly from his sheltered never drive a Volvo (unless he
little heart. I have never seen Diane changes his image).
Sawyer emit anythtng other than
Starn can and often must change
smarmy insincenty, and an their image. When Frank Sinatra
assump11on of intimacy both lost his teen appeal~ ~e boldly
unearned and unshared. In other recast himself as a senous actor 111
words, I can watch Michael Jack- "From Here to Eternity." Arnold
son with appalled fascination, but I Schwarzeneggcr had to show a
change Ute channel whenever I see lighter side in "Twins" before he
Diane Sawyer.
could reprise Ills role of killer robot
So what is a star? A star is a from the future.
be.&lt;t-sellin,g prOduct wiUt lbe ability
Some can manage i~ and some
to have a voice in its own promo- can't. When Sylvester Stallone
uon. ThiS makes for strru1ge capi- tried to carry light C&lt;?medies, audi-

/an Shoa/es

•
•

cnccs stayed away. They don't'
want to see him in a tuxedo; Utey
wam to see him shirtless, bleeding,
and drutghng fmm great he1ghl~ .
Anti so too wiU1 Michael Jackson. Each year he more resembles a
rorcelain doll from another plane~
yet his act becomes tougher, his
lyrics more butch. Now he wants to
be considcretl a nonnal joe, a lucky
sllff wlto married E l~i s' . daughter
aud found true love m Neverland.
Even if they're just two
smooclung freaks 111 a sideshow,
why begrudge the Jacksons the
Illusion of r01mmce? It's all part of
the entertainment package, and JUSt
a haff-time show at that. Pretty
soon mightier freaks will be smashing mto each oilier on Ute gridiron
again, and we cultural elile can get
back to nonnal.
{To receive a complimentary
Ian Shoales newsletter, call 1·
8011-989-DUCK or write Duck's
Breath, 408 Broad St., Nevada
City, CA 95959,)
•
ian Shoales is a sy ndicated
writer fnr Newspaper Enterprise
Association.
(Fnr information on how to
communicate electronically with
this co)ufDSJist and others, con•
·tact America Online i$y calling 1· .
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
·
•

.

Frederick J. "F.J." Hastwell, 21, 502 Debbie Drive, Gallipolis, died
Sunday, June 25, 1995. at Holzer Medical Center. He was serving in Ute
U.S. Army, 82nd Airborne Division, and stationed at Fon Bragg, N.C.
A 1992 graduate of Gallia Academy High School, he attended Wilmington College where he played football.
He was a member ot Ute First Presbyterian Church.
Bom Nov: 13, 1973 in Gallipolis, he wa~ the son of Frederick and
Hanna Ramsay Hastwell of Gallipolis.
In addition to his parents, he is survived by two sisters, Heatlter·Hastwell of Columbus and Whitney Hastwell of QallijlOiis; maternal grandparents, Harold and Evelyn Ramsey of Wmtersville; paternal grandmotlter,
Helen Hastwell of Wintersville; and several aunts, uncles and cousins.
He was preceded in deatlt by his paternal grandfather, Fred HastweU

By The Associated Press
central and north-central Ohio,
Thunderstorms will remain in caused minor rural and urban
Ohio's weather picture tonight and flooding. Power was knocked out
Wednesday, foreca~ters said:
to an estimated 70,000 homes and
The heaviest stonn activity is businesses for awhile.
k
.
.
.
The recor!hhigh temperature f
likely to he in northern Ohio
Friends
may
call
6
to
9
p.m.
today
at
the
Cremeens
Funeral
Chapel in
I because of a stalled cold front over
Utis date at lbe Columbus wealb
Gallipolis
and
one
hour
prior
to
Ute
service,
which
will
be
held
II a.m.
Ute northeast corner of the state, Ute station was 101 degrees in 1944
Wednesday
at
Ute
First
Pres
byterian
Church
witlt
Ute
Rev.
AI
Earley
offiNational Weather Service said.
while the record low was 45 itt
ciating.
·
Southern Ohio will have partly 1981. Sunset tonight will be at 9:04
Burial wtll follow in Ute Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. where full
cloudy skies and scattered Utunder- p.m. and sunrise Wednesday at
military
graveside rites wtll be performed by Ute Ftrst Squadron, 16th Calstorms.
6:05a.m.
vary
Regiment
oflbe U.S . Army from Fort Knox, Ky.
Weather fnreca•t:
Highs wtll be around 80 in the
Memorial
contributions
may be made to the First Presbyterian Church
north and be low to mid-80s m the
Tonight...Considerable cloudior
the
Gallia
Academy
H1gh
School Athletic Boosters Fund.
· south, which will get more sun- ness with scattered showers or
shine.
thunderstontJs Lows 65 to 70.
TbunderstontJS early today proWednesday ... Showers or thunduced torrential rains in parts of tlerstorms likely north.
NontJan C. Milam, 69, Grove City, died Sunday, June 25, 1995. He
was retired from Americllll Aggregates Corporation where he had 43
years of service.
·
A World War II veteran, be was a member of lbe Gallia County Veterans Association. He was also a lifetime member of ABT Bowhng.
Born Feb. 24, 1926 in Sissonville, W.Va., he was Ute son of Ute late
S.H. and Mamie L. Campbell Milam .
'
Survivors
include
his
wife,
Mildred
A.
Milrun;
one
daughter, Claudia
·A fontJer Middleport resident pleaded guilty to charges he fraud(Robert)
Johnson
of
Newport,
Ky.;
one
s011,
Gene
(Amy)
Milam of Grove ,
ulenUy received $3.500 in welfare benefits, said Meigs County
City;
four
grandchildren,
Angela
Johnson,
Chad
and
Heatlter
Milam and
Assistant Prosecutor Chris Tenoglia.
Brooklyn
Brokaw;
two
sisters,
Vevel
(Clyde)
Newhouse
of
West
Virgmia
'
Jack Yates, also known as Jack Smitlt, and who also lived in
and
Reave!
Fritzi
us
of
Georgia;
four
brotlters,
Milford
(Anyce)
and
Noble
Mason, W.Va .. pleaded guilty to two fourth-degree felonies,
(Pat)
Milam,
boUt
of
Columbus.
Davie
(Hazel)
Milam
of
Racine
and
Gary
Tenaglia said.
(Marie)
Milam
of
Indiana;
and
several
nieces
and
nephews.
Yates will serve 12 monUls in prison for Ulefl and serve a conIn addition to his parents, he was preceded in dealb by-one broUler,
secutive sentence for tampering with recor~ charges. Yates must
Belford.
pay restitution for Ute benefits he received.
Friends may call 2 to 4 p.m . and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the
Between Feb. 17 and July 1993, Yates received $3,500 in beneSchoedinger
Norris Chapel. 3920 Broadway, Grove City, where the serfits wbile be earned $17,000, Tenoglia said. During the previous 16
vice
will
be
held 1:30 p.m. Wednesday witlt Ute Rev. C. Curtis Sheets
months, he hail made nearly $48,000.
officiating.
Burial will be in Grove Ctty Cemetery.

I

If ever llll issue was made to
order for bellowing, butt-bussing,
chauvinistic, demagogic, fulsome,
hypocritical. pusillanimous,
screeching, shallow , smarmy.
speec hifymg, supercilious politicians, Ute flag burning amendment

Vernon W. "Tex" "Red'' Blevins, 74, Raciae, died Sunday, June 25,
1995 at his llcJme in Newark. He - a beavy equi)llllent operator.
Bom MilCh 20. 1921 in Mlddlelown. he was the son of the late Marcus and Edna Black Blevins.
He is survived by bis wife, Mildred Friend Blevins, Racine; lbree
daugbters, Redenilb (Raody) Mills of Synu:use. lmojean Blevins of
Newark, and Elizabelb Hagcratrand of Racme; three sons, William
(Karen) Blevins and Luther Blevins, both of~ ~s. Aa, and Menifee
Blevins or Racioe; tbree stepdau&amp;bters. Patrtcta G1bson of Las Vegas,
Nev., and Norma Jean Antbony and Hazel Vance, boUt of Ripley, W.Va.;
two stepsons, Larry Ramsey of Ripley, and Ernest Lee Ramsey of
Pomeroy; tbree sisters, Velma Lindon of Florence, Ky., Jorheta Roach of
Florida, and Jane Bartley of Woodlawn, Ky.; tbree brothers, Roy Blevins
of Buffalo, N.Y., Jobnny Blevins of Jacksonville, Fla., and Jimmy
Blevins of Kentucky; and nine grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.
He was also preceded in deaUJ by a sister, Beatrice Lay; two brothers,
Marcus Blevins and Douald Blevins; a stepson, Texal Ramsey; and eight
stepgrandchildren .
He belonged to the International Union of Operating Engineers # 18 in
Columbus.
Services will be Thursday at II a.m. in the. Ewing Funeral Home,
Pomeroy. Burial will be in Ute Rock Springs Cemetery. Friends may call
at lbe funeral borne on Wednesday from 2-4 and 7-~ p.m.
In lieu of flowers , donations may be made to lbe Licking County Hospice or the Rock Springs Beuer Heallb Club.

Frederick Hastwell

EIJITOR'S NOTE- Jill Lawrence covers Congress and politics
for The Associated Press.

Berryls World

Vernon W. Blevins.

Act:a-"''I n.-taec:lll for

After six

111 Court 8tNet
Pomei'Of, Oblo

The second annual Party at lbe Lake will be held Sunday at
Forked Run Stale Park near Reedsville starting at 7 p.m. with live
mustc and dancin . Refreshments are available. Brio lawn chairs.

The Daily Sentinel
CUSPS ltJ-960)
Published every af1ernoon, Monday through
FndD.y, Ill Court Sl , Pomeroy, Oh1o by the

Oh10 Valley Pubhshing Compmly/MultimedJa

•

Inc.. Pomeroy Oh10 45769. Ph 992 -2!56
Sct:ond class postage patd al Pomeroy, Ohio.
Member: The Associated Press, and the Ohto
Newtpa~r At!IOCUI.tion

The Druly Senti11el, Ill Coun St., Pomeroy,
Oh10 45769

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Curier or Motor Route
One W~k ........................... .$1.15

.

... .. ... . .S7 60
One Year .. ... . . . . .. .. ................ S91 00

SINGLE COPY PRICB
D&amp;ly ........................... .

Stocks
Am Ele Power ........................34 518
Akzo ..............................................60
Ashland 011 ..:........................ .35 114
AT&amp;T ...................•.................52 314

COURTHOUSE VANDALS - Vandals, or a single vandal,
struck the Meigs County Courthouse over the weekend, tipping
over nower planters and rolling them down the hill beside the
courthouse. Here, courthouse custodian Homer Smith Jr., who
prepared the planters, examines the aflermath. ·

Dollar General store
·to move to new site
The Pomeroy Dollar General has limited unloading access frout
store will relocate from its down- an all ey behind Ute building
"!be store moved into Ute area m
town location to a new structure
being built on the former MGM 1981. In 1987, it moved frC\m the
si te, officials announced receuUy.
corn er of Lynn and West Majn
Carmel Stsson, manager at Ute streets to its current West Main
Dollar General in Pomeroy. said location.
her company expects the new
Stock space will be !united, hut
structure to be buill by July 17. The extra parkmg will be available. Sis company could move in by Aug I. son added.
The Pomeroy store has been
Dollar General will add anotlter
2,000 square feet witlt this move, listed in lbe top 10 percent or t~c
Sisson added.
Dollar General chain, Sisson said.
The current West Main Street ! The retailer employs seven workproperty has about 6,000 square ers
feet, she said. The current location

Authority gets FAA grant
(Continued from i'a~e I)
development in Ut e area ha&lt; hmiled
its space ophons, he added
At the promptin g of the Ohio
Deparanem of Transrortation, the
aulllority hirel) Woolpen iu 1991 to
detennme tt th e present rurport mel
ruture needs.
Woolpen' s study "concluded
that !lte cunent site woultlnol sufftce m Ute decades to come," Beebe
said. "The current facility. while
nol unsafe, docs not meet current
FAA sthng mtena."
Establishment of a new airport
at Ute Watson site will be a key in
spurring area economic development, REDA, Executive Director
R.V. "Buddy" Graham saul. The
airport will ~ e m witlt a prorose~
mdustrial park in the v1cinity, he
added.
"By puttmg th ese projects
together. I Utink, we can offer an

35 Ctnts

Bob Evans .... ,..........................20 114
ChampiOn Ind ........................22 114
Charming Shop ........................ 4 718
City Holding ...........................16 1/l
Federal Mogul... ..................... l7 518
Goodyear T &amp; R .................. ....42 1/l
K·mart .................................... l4 314
Lands End .............................. 14 118
Limited In&lt;...................................ll
Multimedia In&lt;......................40 118

James Sayre

(Continued from Page 1)
rate; a11d unemploymem ts aL l ~tsl
James Martin Sayre, 86. Deltona, A:r., died Monday, June 26, 1995, at !50 percent of Ute national level.
his residence. He retired from the Gallipolis Developmental Center as a ARC mdt cates.
baker in 1968. He was a World War ll U.S. Navy veteran and member of
"Even w1th ARC lund1n g,
the Community Baptist Church in St. Cloud, Aa.
Ap(lalachia receives 14 percent less
Boro June 25, 1909 in Antiquity, he was Ute son of Ute late Okey and ; in total per capita federal spentlmg
Carrie Willis Sayre. He married Anna Porter April20, 1932.
Ulan Ute rest of the nation,'' AnderIn addition to his wife, he is survived by two daughters, Nonna Burris son said. "In short. raU1er th rm gelof Orlando, Aa. , and Louann Sayre of Deltona, Fla.; one son, Dallas ling special treaanent, Ute people of
Sayre of lnvemess, Fla.; two sisters, Irene Payne of Pillanian Park, Aa,., Arralaclua receive less help from
and Maxine Camp of Columbus; and 12 grandchildren and 20 great Ute federal govemment Ulan peorle
grandchildren.
m oUter regions."
Besides his p~nts, be was precedetl in deatlt by one broUter, Warren
ARC is governed by a 14-memW. Sayre.
bcr cotrunisston, whiclt consists of
Friends· may call 6 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at Ute Waugh-Halley-Wood a federal C(J·chamnan, apronl!ed
Funeral Home where Ute service will be held 10:30 am Thursday witlt
by U1c president rutd subject 10 SenUte Rev Chester Lemley oflictaling.
me continnation, ami ll1e govemors
Burial will follow in Plant Cemetery m Metgs County where Veterans of the 13 states.
of Foreign Wltrs Post 4464 and Amencan Legton Post 27 ot Galltrolis
Slates are resronsible for develWill make Ute flag presentation
oping annual &gt;tate pl:ms Lhal rellect
local proJects and funtlmg pnnnties Stale plans are rev1ewed by
Ute cmnrn1sston starr and the federTheiss reunion planned
Grange lo meet
al
co-chairman and approved hy
St:tr Grange 778 rutd Star Jumor
The Theiss family reunion will
the
entire commission
be held on July 9 at Star Mill Park, Grat;gc 878 w111 meet m regular
Recemly,
Ute lull ,House Approsesston on Saturday, at 8 p.m. at
Racine
priations
Commiuce
ar~roved a
·
th e Grange Hall, Coun ty Road I
1996
appropnanon
ol
fiscal
year
notlh of Salem Center. All conVan Meter reunion set .
$142
million
fur
AR
C
The
SubThe Van Meter reunion will be tests, sewing, needlework, phmogon Public Buildings and
held July 8 at U1e home of Jo Ann rarhy. Slufled toy. and qUill. Will committee
Economic
Development of the
Crisp, 28180 Apple Grove Dorcas he JUdged.
on
TransjlOrtation and
Comniitlce
Road, Racine, 6 p.m. Those attendPublic Works approved a measure
ing as asked to take .L:lke a covered Revival planned
Utat would reautltonzc 1J1e commiswill
be
Ute
evanDavid
Corwell
dish and a lawn chair.
gelist for special services Saturday sion from 1996 10 200 I with an
and
Sunday, 7 p.m. at the Fellow- an011al appropnation of $182 mtl·
Trustees to me et
lion
The Colwnbia Township Board _slup Church of Racine.
of Trustees will hold its monlbly
meeting at 7:30p.m MQnday at the
Carpenter ftre station.

Meigs announcements

People's .............................. :.. :......23
Subscnbers not desmng to pay the earner may
remn In OOvance du-ec1 to Th,e Daily Semmel
on n three, &amp;ix or 12 month bwlis. Credit wtll be:
gtven camer ench week.

Ohio Valley Bonk ..................34 114
One Valley ............................. .30 518

No suh~cnptton by mrul permlued in areas
where home earner scrvtce IS uvatlable

Royal Dutdt .........1...................... W
Shoney's Inc.......................... 11 314
Star Bank ............................... 45 118
Wendy tnt•t:-......................... 18 518
Worthington Ind ................... .lO 314

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Imide Mtlp County
13 Weeki ........ .. .
.$23.92
26 Weeks ......................................$47.06
l2 W&lt;Cks . .
.• . . . . . . • $92 l6
Ratts OulSiclt Melp County
13 Wocks . . .
. . . . .. ... .m 61
26 Weeks ................................... $4966
l2Wceks ......................... S%20

Rockwell ....................~ ...........45 SIB
Robbins &amp; Myers .................. .l6 l/4

-·-·-

Sta&lt;:k reporlo are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes. provided by Ad•est o
Gallipolis.

Reunion commiUee

Middleport hails .
·
(Continued from Page 1)
David DOwler planted Ute flowers.
The Middleport Volunteer Fire
Deparanent appreciates lbe computer and printer that were donated
·to Utem from the village, Councilwoman Belb Stivers said.
The ·annual Ohio Valley Soap
Box Derby Association was successful. councilman Steve Dunfee
said.
"We want to start building now
for next year's race," Dunfee said.

COfllMG SOOfll - -

TOR IIAHIS tn "APOLLO 1 J"
•"lCHTY RDRfHIR PDWEA RAHCERS"

SL'I' ST.f.Ll.o(WO ln •Juool!l DUPO"

, Gin CERTIACATES A.VAILABLE I

The Ligb t
· Toac!)
By

Dave
Grate
of
Rutland
Furniture t.:...:.~=-=--...J
Dayt1me TV IS the punishment
employers have come up with
for workers who stay home
when they're not really sick.

.. -

Optimist· someone who's been
dtvorced twice and still gets
married again

. ..

II would be easier to recognize

an opportumty 11 1t d1dn't come
d1sguised as hard work.

.. .

Special preaching slated
The Rev Charles Curry will be
the guest speaker Suntl&lt;ty, 7:30
p.m . at the Hobson Christian Fellowship Clmrch . All welcome
The Tbeiss Family Reunton
Committee will meet at the home
of David Kucsma on Sunday. 2
p.m. to fmalize pl:uts for Ute July 9
reunion at Star Mill Park.

attracttve package 10 mdustry or
businesses looking at our area,
which is the name of Ute game," lje
srud.
Graham said REDA would work
wilb county 'officials in poolin g
resources to meet Ute local sbar'e llf
the construction cost, which h~ s
traditionally been 10 percent.
"We should be able to leverage
tltose local dollars to mak e this
happen. and conceivably move Ute
timetable for construction up tO
live years mstead of 10," he said.

ARC assistance

Rank One ......................... ,..... .Jl318

POSTMASTER: Send nddrcu corrr:cuons to

One Month . . . .

The D1lly Sentinel• hie 3

Deaths·--

OHIO WcdlhCI
Wed• Hday, Jaae 28

Page2
Tuesday, June :n, 1915

Sides in PBS fight must ~all truce

The Daily Sentinel'

PorMrOy • Middleport, Ohio

BATTERIES

STRUTS

SHOCKS

JULY SPECIAL

FREE TIRE ROTATION
GENERAL TIRE SALES
Hours M-F 8-5 Sat. 8-12
Middleport, Ohio 45760

113111

It's been suggested that our
laws should ))e rewritten in
s 1mple language so tha1
everyone would understand
what they mean. But then a lot
ol lawyers would have to go to
work for a l1v1ng.
•••

Three ways to tell you're gettmg
old: hrst you lose your memory
and ... we forgot the other twol

Remember this: ..ebest

deals ia towa are stil at
Rutkmd Fu11itvre. Sales,
Service OliSJitdlotd

7 SHOWROOMS

1l WAIEIIOUS!S

Rutland furniture
.Rt. 124, Rlllatld, Oh.

742-2211

�\

The Daily~~~~

;S ports

~~~~~~~--~~----~~~--~--~=-~~~- ,

Ju_
s tice paces Braves past Expos 4-3

OGEA INJURED • Cleveland plt.:her Chad Ogea reads after
being bit by a batted ball In seventh Inning against Kansas City
Monday night at Kansas City. Ogea was taken from the 1•me, but
still recorded .bls fourth win of the season as the Indians posted a
l·O win over tbe second place Royals. (AP)
1

Indians end slump;
top hurler injured

right field pole for his seventh yeor.
By BOB GREENE
Astros 11, Cardinals 0
homer in his last '47 at-bats.
AP Sporta Writer
Greg Swindell's six-hit pitching
Earlier, Piazza bad a two-run
All David Justice wanted was·a
pitch he could see. All Mike Piazza single, giving him five RBis for the was backed by rookie Orlando
Miller's hitting as Houston once
night.
wanted was a good swing.
Todd Worrell (1-0), who went again scored a.bundle of runs at the
They both got their wish.
A two-rUJJ, sixth-inning homer into the ga.me with a string of 12 Astrodome.
Swindell tossed his rust shutout
by Justice carried the Atlanta consecutive saves and a perfect
Braves to their third straight victo- · ERA, earned the victory with one sihce Oct. I , 1993, striking out
five, walking one and allowing
perfect inning of relief.
ry, 4-3 over the Montreal Expos.
Tony Gwynn put the Padres only seven St. Louis baserunners,
"I had just struclc out twiee,"
Justice said. "I was just trying to aheatl 5-4 with a solo homer in the 'only three getting as far as second
get a pitch I could see. I was not ·seventh inning against Pedro Asta- base . .
Miller drove in a career-high
thinking about a borne run. Fortu- cio. It was Gwynn's fifth homer of
five
runs with three hits, including
the
year.
but
only
his
third
at
nately, I bit it well."
a
three-run
homer.
Dodger
StadiUJn
in
14
seasons
.
.
Piazza wailed a liUle longer.
The
Astros,
who scored a clubThe
Dodgers
then
knotted
the
His three-run, opposite-field
record
19
runs
Sunday,
scored nine
score
again
in
the
eighth
on
a
sinshot came in the bottom of tbe
ruPs
on
five
hits
in
1
1-3
innings
gle
and
three
walks
by
Williams.
ninth and boosted the Los Angeles
against
St.
Louis
starter
Mark
including
a.
walk
to
Billy
Ashley
Dodgers to their sixth suaight win,
Petlcovselc
(3-2).
Ant!
by
the
end
of
that forced in the tying run.
8-5 over the San Diego Padres.
the
secooo
inning,
Houston
led
10·
Tim
Wallach
drove
in
tbe
"!just oidn' t want 10 get cheated," Piazza said. "I warited to get Dodgers' first run with a leadoff 0.
"Things are going good for me
three gooo swings and see what homer in the thiro - his thiro of
now,"
Miller said. "I've hao
the
season.
happened ... Fortunately, I got a
streaks
like
this before, but that
!}raves 4, Expos 3
pitch I could hit."
was
in
the
minors."
At Atlanta-Fulton County Stadi· In other games Monday night,
Despite the huge lead, Swindell
Florida oefeated New York 9-4, um, the'Braves overcame a 3·0
dido'
t change his pitching style. · '
Pittsburgh beat Chicago 8-6 and ·deticit in winning for the lOth time
"I
pitched like it was a 1-0
in q games ano handing Montreal
Houston blanked St. Louis 11-0.·
game,"
he said. "You still got to
Piazza's 12th homer of the sea- its lOth loss in 12 games.
stick
to
your
game plan. If you start
son and 72nd of his career was his
Ryan Klesko also homered for
throwing
fastballs,
they might
first winning game-ending shot.
Atlanta.
back."
come
The Braves rallied off reliever
"! had a couple of these in the
Houston hao i4 hils, getting at
minor leagues, but obviously this is Luis Aquino (0-2), who yielded a
least
one from every starter except
completely oifferent," Piazza said. one-out double to Fred McGriff
Phil
Nevin
ano Jeff Bagwell.
"The crowd -was really into it. before Justice homered over the
"I
let
the team down ,"
They were fired up and they slayetl center-field fence.
there the whole game. It's really
The Expos took a·3-0 lead in the Petkovsek said. "I've had some
third with five consecutive hilS off pretty good games, but I opened
special."
··
Padres reliever Brian ' Williams Tom Glavine (6-4), who gave up the flood gate.~ tonight.".
· (1 ·5) hit Delino DeShields with a nine hils, walked one and struck Marlins 9, Met• 4
Jeff Conine's two-run homer at
pitc~ to start the inning. After Jose
out six before leaving for a pinchOfferman walke&lt;l, Trevor Hortman hitter in the seventh. Mark Wohlers Joe Robbie SL1oium sparked a livecame on aoo Piazza drove his first pitched the ninth for his third. save run sixth inning and powered Fluripitch over the short fence near the in three games ano his fifth of the da nver New York. Charles Juhn"

By CHRIS SHERIDAN
the catcher's head. ·
AP Sports Writer
"I was coming as hard as I
The opener of a big three-game could," GreenweU saio. "Fortuseries in the AL Central was a nately, be ainnaile&lt;l it.' ·
downer for tbe Kansas City Royals
·Stan Belinda (5-0) ~ot the win
and their largest crowd of the year. after failing to protect the 3-0 lead.
The Cleveland Indians survived Yankees 7, Tigers 3
two injuries and beat. Kansas City ·
At Yankee Stadium, Randy
· 2-0 Monday night to open a 6. 112· Velarde and Wade Boggs had three
game lead over their nearest cbal· hits apiece arid rookie left-bander
Ienger in tbe division.
Andy Pettitte (3-4) pitched seven
The Royals bad a chance to shutout innings.
make baseball 's most lopsided
"The way that kid pitched,
divi sional race interesting. They nobody was going to beat him,"
were facing a team tbat was swept Tigers manager ,Sparky Anderson
in a three-game series at Chicago said. "He was outstanding. He was
over the weekend and then lost its much different than the last time
sparkplug in the second inning we saw him.''
when Kenny Lofton strained his
Yankees starters are 5-0 with a
left hamstring.
1.97 ERA in the last five gamesWIMBLEDON. England (AP)
But by that time, Lofton had all wins. Felipe Lira (4-4) had his _Big servers weren't bothere&lt;l by
already driven in one run and. four-game winning streak ended.
. the slower balls at Wimbleoon.
scored another. And no more runs Atbletlcs 4, Rangers 3
In an attempt to curb the power
crossed the plate the ·rest of the
At The Ballpark in Arlington, hitting that has uomitiateu the
night.
l
the Rangers blew a three-run lead grass-court tournament, Wimble"I think he's very doubtful for in the ninth by making two throw- tlon introduced a softer, heavier
tomorrow, but we'll just check him ing errors. A third bad throw pulled ball for this year.
day -to-day. We'd better get him Will Clark off ftrSt base on a potenBut there was no shortage of
back because he's a very important tial game-ending double p1ay ball.
aces on the first &lt;lay of play Mon-·
part of our ballclub," Cleveland
Terry Steinbach and Stan Javier day . Three men had at least 20
. manager Mike Hargrove said.
had RBI singles and Craig Paquette aces: fourth-seeoed Gomn lvruliseIt didn't even hurt the Indians tie&lt;l it with a double. The winning vic and No. 14 Todd Martin each
when pitcher Chad Ogea left the run score&lt;l on Benji Gil's throwing had 21 and two-time defending
game in the seventh inning after a error.
champion Pete Sampras hao 20.
batted ball hit him in the belly . · Todd Stottlemyre (6-1) struck
Scottish wild card Ross MatheRelievers Jim Poole, )ulian out nine in eight innings. Ed Vos- son served 19 aces while losing to
Tav.arez and Jose Mesa finished otT berg (2-2) took the loss.
David Wheaton, who lmo 13. Even
a combi.ned seven-hiller before a White Sox 6, Twins S
5-foot-9 Michael Chang, never
.paid crowo of 24,296 at Kaufrtnan
At the Metrodome, Frank k1iown for his serve, had 14 aces ·
Stadium.
·
Thomas hit his 17th ano 18th while beating Frenchman Lionel
. ''Ogea Uuew a goo&lt;l fastball and homers - boU1 two-run shots Roux. Canadian-born Greg Ruseds- ·
changeup, which was loug·h· to and Chicago got a rare road win.
ki, ·now playing for Britain, had a
read,·' Kansas City manager Bob
Brian Keyser 0·2) pitched out dozen.
Bpone said. "The only way to get of uouble all night befort&lt; Roberto
Sampras : who relieo on his
him was to kill him."
Hernandez worked the ninth for hir serve to overcome Germany •s
The Royals didn't help them- 12th save. Brad Radke (3-7) left Karsten Braasch in four sets s:lid
selves. either, leaving 14 runners after 5 2-3 innings, ending a string the new balls favor the ret~rner
on base. ·
of I 0 games in which. T_wins more U&gt;ru&gt; hurting the huge servers.
So, insteao of having a cl,lance suu;ters worked at least s1x mnmgs.
"It's easier to return," he said.
to pull within 2 1/2 games of the Or10les 2, Brewers 0 .
.
"If anything, I thiilk these softer
Indians, the RQyals will have to . At County Stadmm, Jam1e halls will affect the guys Utat don 't
win L,he Ja"t two game." in the series Moy~r (:1:·3) took a no-h1t!er mto serve ru."Well. Last year, a mediocre
to get wilhin 4 1/2.
the s1xth and combmed With two serve wou ld be helped out by a
In other g:une.&gt;, Bos10n beat reheverson a two-ht.Uer. .
haroer hall.' This ye:u·, it's a lillie
Toromo 4-3, Oakland beat Texas 4Rafael Paimetro and Kevm Bass softer. so you have a lit lie bit more
3, New York beat Detroit 7-3, had RBis for Baltimore. which time to return."
Chicago beat Minnesoot 6-5; Balti- dealt Mil\'laukec. its timnh straight
more beat Milwaukee 2-0 ruul Seat- los,. Brewers starter Angel Mirantle beat Califomia 7-3 .
da (4-3) reinjured hb surgically
Red Sox 4, Blue Jays 3
repaire&lt;l left knee.
At. Fen way Park. t11c Red Sox Mariners 7, Angels 3
blew a three-run lead in the lop of
At the Kingoome, Tino Marthe ninth, then came back to win it tin ez hit a three-run homer and
in t11e bottom of the inning on Luis Luis Sojo and &amp;lgar Martinez also
Alicea· s single,
homere&lt;l.
Mike Greenwell scored the winSalomon Torres (2-3) won hi'
ping run after getting hil by a· pitch second straight game, going 6 2-3
and stealing sec~no. Candy Mal- innings ami aJinwing two runs on
donatio fielded Alicea's hit niT six hits. Brian Anderson (1-1) gave
Our statistics show that mature dri·
Tony Castillo (0-2) rn&gt;d had a play up all three homers and seven runs
vers and home owners have fewer and
'" the plate, but his throw tlew over iil4 1-3 innings.
less costly losses lhan ot her age
groups. So 1t's only fair lo charge you
less tor your insurance .. Insure your
home and car w1th us and save even
Mark Queen of Wayne, West pal, won the AMRA Modified fea·
· more with our special mulli·policy
Virginia continued his oominance ture by holding off Kevin Grahm.
discounts.
m the Limited Late Model class at Ed Eschmann, ami Jerry Graley .
Southern Ohio Speedway. The Carson Rogers won the Bomber
on ly other winner in the oivision f~ature followed by Jim Dixon,
tl1is year ha.&lt; been Pomeroy's Todd Tom Cox, and Conard Newman.
Smith has been one of the
Sm1th, who broke Queen's streak
two weeks ago, and placed fourth hottest Limited Late Model drivers
Saturday. Queen won the Tri-State in t11e area this year. claiming feaChampionship in a heated race that ture wins at three different tracks,
saw tllrce different leaders. Russ including two big wins at Skyline,
Frohnapfel of Cincinnati led the where he defeated perennial chamfirst ten laps before giving way to pion Kirk Isner .in a great battle .
Smith . Smith led until the four- Smith also ran Late Model this past'
• tecnth lap when Queen took the Frioay and diu a great job at West
Virginia Motor Spee&lt;lway in Min lead fnr gocxl.
Following Queen across the line eral Wells, W.Va.
were Wayne Maffei, Larry Van
Hoose , and Smith . Queen, Frohanrfel, and John Remy won the
hem races. Jim Wilson of Fraziers
Bonom, the Hannan High princi-

son also homered for the Marlins,
capping the inning with a two-run
sbot.
Bobby Bonilla's two-run homer
in the first and run-scoring single in
the fourth gave slarler Bobby Jones
(4-5) and the Mets a 3·2 lead.
Bonilla also hit a solo homer, his
lith, in the ninth to knock in all of
New Yorlc's runs.
The loss pushed the Meis deeper
into last place in the NL.East.
Marlins starter Pat Rapp (3-4)
pitched seven .innings. allowing ·
five hits and three runs. Rapp's-:
ninth career victory at Joe Robbie :
Sl3dium is a Marlins reconl.
·
Pirates 8, Cubs 6
At Wrigley Field, Carlos Garcia
went 3-for-4 with a homer and
extended his hitting streak to 20 .
games as Pittsburgh dropped
Chicago to .500 for the first time
this season.
. Garcia also ooubled and singled ·
and is bitting .365 (27-for-74) dur· .
ing his streak.
.
''Early in tbe season I was ·
thinking too much. Now I just go:
along with the pitch. I'm just see· :
ing the ball good," Garcia said.
AI Martin had three bits and ·
three RBis as the Pirates had a sea- ·
son-high 16 hits.
·
Trailing 7-3, the Cubs rallied for ·
three runs in tbe eighth off reliever
Jim Gou. But Jason Christiansen
relieved and got Mark Grace to
ground out to end the rally.
Steve .Parris (1-0) got his first
major league victory in his second
big league start. Dan Miel;Ji pitched
the ninth for his lOth s'ave, while
Cups starter Steve Trachsel (2-6)
twk the loss.

We Give Mature

Drivers, Home
Owners And
Mobile Home
Owners Special
Savings.

Queen continues dominance

New EHS coach
to hold meeting
New Eastern High .School foot·
ball coach Casey Coffey bas
announced that tlie team will bold
an organizational meeting this
.Wednesday, June 28 at the High
School. Anyone, grades 9-12
wishing to play football this seasm
should attend this meeting.

214 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6687
.Aulo-Oime··
~
Life HO"H! Car BUGlr'lf!SS
74i1ht1o6&amp;••t~"

of playing Aga.•si.
'T &lt;I rather play him than Pete
Srunpra.&lt;," he said. "Atlea&lt;tl'll he
able to see his serve. I'm nol sure 1
would even get close to Srunpras.
Another thing in my favor i~ I
know a lot more abnul his game

thru1 he does about mine.' ·
Among the women, top-secdeo
Stefli Graf was set to play 14-yearold Swiss phenom Martina Hingis;
and .tlefending ch:unpion Conchita
Martinez w:l' up against Asa Carlsson .
There wt« one upset on opening
day. Grass-court specialist Bryan
Shelton of Atlanta ousted 12thseeded Richart! Krajicek· of the
Netherlands 7-6 (7-2) , .6-3. 6-3.. it

marked the second year in a row
tltat Krajicek lost in the first round
while Shelton showed the tonn that
look him 10 the foltrth round last '
year.
Shelton's only two career tour- ·
nament tiUes have come in a grass- :
court tournament in New(ion, R.I. :
One seedetl woman also was ·
eliminated. Mexico's Angelica :
Gavaloon ousted No. II Iva Majoii
of Croatia 1-6, 6-3, 6-1.
·
Aaron Krickstein, with his 4-6, ·
0-6, 7-6 (7-4), 6-2, 6-2 victory over ·
Christian Berg strom, came from ·
two seL~ down to win for the lOth :
time in his career. He is unbeaten ·
in four career live-setters at Wim· :
blooon.
·

The Dally Sentinel• P.p 5

•

·;R ijo wants to ·return to mound Friday
day to the Florida Marlins. He. could tluealen his career.
SlrUdt out five in lbe 76-pik:b stint
The Reds got some bad news m
"I think I accomplisbed my center fw:lder t:l(:ion Sanders. The
mission," Rijo said. "My arm felt speedster bas been sidelined siDce
awesome but I wasn't even thinlr- he sprained bis left anlrle sliding
ing about pitcbing tOday . It was Into third base in Pittsburgh on
more just bow my arm felt on May 31.
every pitch rather than location. 1
Reds manager Davey Johnson
was dtrowing the slider as bard as I bad hoped Sanders would be ready
could to see bow it felt, and it felt for the start or a series Tuesday
great."
night in Philadelphia. But Sanders
Rijo, 30, is trying to get through is still having trouble making cuts
the rest of the season before having on the ankle.
elbow surgery to remove a bone
Tbe Reds have been told not to
formation lodged within a llga- . expect him for another week.
ment. If be needs it sooner, the .
"I'd love to have him for the
operation would eild his season and Pbilly series, but we're not going to
rusb it, ...Johnson said.

CINCINNATI (AP)- Jose
Rijo wants to be badt m tbe pitdl·
ing mound Friday nigbt for the
Cincinnati Reds. He bopes tbat his
elbow will allow it.
. Rijo, tryillg to avoid surgery lbat
could cut bis season sbort, pitdled
four innings Sunday in bis loosest
stint in almost a month. He and the
Reds are hoping be doesn't have
painful repercussions lhat would
stop him from making his next start
Fri&lt;lay night in New Y!lllc.
Tbe right-bander, most valuable
player of Cincinnati's 1990 World
Series sweep of Oakland, allowed
four runs on seven hits and a walk
in four innings of. the 4·l loss Sun·

W

L
23

....... .....28
New York
.......25
Baltimore
.........24
Toroato
'1 ....... .. 20

29

a.....

........... n

Detro~

r..t.

GB

.491

l

.ol63
,4:)6
.

m

6 Ill
8
1l

hL

GB

.m

29
31
33

W

W L

......... 37 11

Allanla

...... 30 23

.566

6 tn

.463

' ll

aucaco

Minoe&amp;ota

.......... 22

ll
....... .17 31

Aorida

Ton~
Oakland

. s..ute

........... 32 24

.571

I

......... 30 27

..526

3 I(l

.......20 37

.370 16 112
.351

18

Central· Division
W L r.t.

,

...., .... 34
......... 29
Chl~o
........ .. 28
Pitlsb,.lh .........22
St. Louis ........... 23

GB
.618
.527
S
28 .SOO 6 ·Ill
32
.407 II Ill
34
.404
12

21
26

.m

W L . Pd~
Lo1 Angeles .......31 26
.544
ColoAdo
..... ,... 30 26 .S36
San DieKo
.. ......28 21
.SOO

GB
1

San FranciiCO ......28 29

4

.491

GB

·lfl
2 lfl
3

Mond.,'• Gunea
Florida 9, New York 4
Atlanta 4, Montreal 3
Houston I I, St. Louts 0
Pittsbt.rJ.h I , Oilet~.,_'O 6
Lo11 An~eleg I, San Diego 5
Only games Jebeduled ·•

Mond111'• G.rnet
B01to11 &lt;1, Toronto 3
N'ew Ywk 7; Detroit 3
. Cleveland 2, Kaasas City 0
Baltimore 2, Milwaukee 0
Chica&amp;o 6, Mlnot60ta S

OatiiUid 4, Teu1 3

Tu~1'•Gam~

Seattle 7. caJir(lrnia J
Tuelld•f'• G-.ntt
Toronto (Darwin l·B) at BOlton

Colorado (Swift 2·2) at.San fnuJciaco
(BautiJ;ta 2·3), 4:05p.m.
·
New York (Pulsiphet 0.2) at Florida
{Witt 1·5), 7:05p.m.
Ciacia.nlti (Sffiiley 6-t) .t Philadel·
phia(Mini116-l), 7:"p.m.

(Clemens 2·)). 7:0S p.m.
Dettoit (Bohaoon 0-0) al New York
(Bankhead 1·1), J :JS p.m.

Moatreal (Henry2·S) II. Atlanlll (Av-

"'/ 2-&lt;~ NO p .m

l.ee (Sparb 3-2), 8:05 p.m.
· Cleveland (Clark. 2-:Z) at iCaDIIal City
(Haney 3-1), 8:05p.m.
Calirornia (B ielecki 3-4) nt Tel&amp;S

Pitubwah (Neqle 1-3) at Chie~~ao
(Bulliaa,er 4-0), 8:o.5 p.m.
•
SL Louis (1acboa ().7) Ill Houlton
(Drabek l·l), 8:0l p.m.

(Tewksbury l·3).1:3l P·"'
Ollldand (Hlvtey 3-4) al SeotUo
(lklcher J-2), 10:05 p.m.

San Dieao (Dilturw.n 0·1) at Loa An--

gelee (Martinez 7·4), IO:OS p.m
Wednndar'• Gamn
Mon~ (Martinez S-4) at Atlanla
(Metcker ~). 12:40 p.m.
Pittlbw-gti (Erlckl 0.1) af Chicago
(Navarro 5-2), l :lO p.m.
,
St. Loui1 (Morpa ':J-2) at HQUitun
(Hampton l·l), 2:35p.m.
Colorado (Rey.noao 1·0} at Sen fran ·
cisco (PortueaJ 5·2). 3:3S p.m.
New York (Sabethaaen 4-2) at Florida (Burkett 5·6), 7:05p.m.
.

Wedntlday'• Gunea
Detrolt (Wells 5-3) at New York. CMc·
Dowell4-4), l:OS p.m.
' Chicago (Bere 3-6) at Minnetota
lTD(liUii 4-7). 1:1 5 p.m.
Baltimore (MURRina 6·5) Ill Mllwau·
· lee (Bonelli 4-5), 2:0.5 p.m.
Cleveland (Nlliy +4) at Kallillfi City
(Applet 11·2). 4:0l p.m.

10

.~)
.$89 4 til

West Division

Ptt.
.SI9

27

.........28 29 · .491

...........20 34

Cibeinlllii
Houston

.4U 14112
.309 20 lf2

W L
.......... 33 . 23

............29

GB

· New York

West Division
CBiirornia

Pd.

........... )) 23

Montreal '

.615

Milwaukee . , .....2!1 29

Kanw City

L

Philldolphia ........ 37 II

Central Division
Cleveland

NEW YORK (AP) - Fired
Boston Celtics coach Chris Ford
bas talked with New York Knicks
general manager Ernie Grunfeld
about coaching the team next sea-

National League
By The Associated Press
AU Times EDT
East Division

American League
By The Associated Press
AU Times EDT
East Division

--

.

'roronto {Cone S-4) at B~ton (Smith
·
CaJirorDia (Lanptoa 6~1) at Tex&amp;K
(RoBrn 8-3}, 8:35p.m.
2·3), 7:05 p.m.

CiacinnaU (Nitkowlti ().I) 111
Philadelphia (Schillina 5-2:), 7:35p.m.
Saa Di•ll" (Ashby 4-4) at wa Anacles (Valda S-2).10:35 p.m.

Oakland (Slewllrt 3·6) ot SeatUe
(Johnson K-1), \O:JS p.m.

RedS piiCbets were battered last
week, compiling a 6.50 earned run

average for the bomestaoo while
the hiuers batted a collective .242.
Atlanta began the week by beating
the Reds 10-0 and 10-2 on sucoessive days. On Friday night, Aorida
woo, 16-4.
Catcher -Benito Santiago, who
last played on May 7 and bad right
elbow surgery on May 25, could be
available before the end of the sixgame road uip. He bit well in batting practice Suoday aoo threw for
20 minutes at a distance of 130
feet, the range from behind the
plate to second base.

Ford interested in Knicks job

Scoreboard

Chi~go (Abbott 3-3} at Minnewlll
(Hiln'is 0.0), 8:05p.m.
BaJtimnre (DeSilva 0-0) at Mitwau·

Sampras advances in .Wimbledon play
S:unpras was confounded more
by Braasch's bizarre service
motion than by the new balls .
Braasch's left-banded windup
resembles tlmt of a wcekentl backer
or a baseball pitcher.
Other big servers were scheouled to play first-rouno matches
today, including third-see&lt;led Boris
Becker, paired against Emilio
AI varez, and No. 9 Michael Stich.
facing Jacco Ellingh.
But the day 's top attraction ligured to be top-seeded Andre Aga.•si. set io face Australian qualifier
Antlrew Painter on Court One.
The 19-year-old Painter, ranked
No. 530 in the world ano playing in
his first tour-level everit, said be
wasn't intimidated by the th\)ught

Pomtroy • Middleport, Ohio

rueeday, June 'ZT, 1115

son.

.

Ford, who bas a summer home
in Margaie, N.J .• met wiib Grun·
feld in New York on Monday after
retl)rning from a weekend trip to
·
Bennuda.
Pat Riley resigned as coach of
·

the Knicks on June 15 . Ford was
fire&lt;l by the Celtics last month and
replaced as coach by Celtics general manager ML Carr.
Former Golden State Warriors
general manager and coach Don
Nelson also is being considered for
the Knicks' coaching job.
"There's no urgency bere,"
Grunfeld said. "We don't have a
pick in the draft, so there's no
oeadline there . We're just going to
take our time."

Saturday drag race
winners announced

Saturday at Kanawha Valley
Dragway Park in Southside, W.Va.
a quick 32 field joined the regular
racing schedule. lri the quiclc ~2.
Jim Pauckner of Blanchester took
the win in his 1993 Dragster,
defeating Bil Craddock's 1967
Camara from Hersbaw, W.Va.
Tony Ours of Crown City and
Louis Reese, Jr. were semi-finalists.
·
In the Pro-Division, Rick
Williamson of South Point, Ohio
took first in U1e his 1967 Corvette
with Tim Echols of Bancroft,
W.Va. finishing secon d ahead of
Sbeldong Gerlack and Larry White.
In the Modified ET, Middleport,
Ohio's Duane Weber took his ftrst
win of the season. in his 1982 S-10.
Last week's winner Bob Ritchie,
Jr. of Racine.was second in his '73
Camaro, and yet anotber Meigs
Countian Tim Baum in the Hot
Springs/Baum Lumber Camaro
was third.
In lbe Street division. Loretta
Bini was the winner over Eddie
Workman and Brenda Venoy of

Long Bottom was thinl. The winner in the Jr. Dragster division was
Brandon Skeens of South Point,
ahead of Mike Stowers, Jr. and
Jon~than Clay.
This Saturday will feature members of the Carolina Pro Mod Association ant! the Superwinch Wheelslander Funny Car along with the
normal bracket schedule . Gates
open at II, tiem trials at I p.m.,
ano eliminations at 6:30.

SAMPRAS ADVANCES • Gumany'~ Karsten Br.aasch looks
off court during his !!'atch agalrist defendit;sg champion Pete Sampras on Wimbledon's Centre Court Monday. Sampras advanced
with 7•6, 7•4, 6-7,2-7,6-4,6-1 victory. (AP)

-----Sports briefs---NEW YORK (AP) - CieveL'tDd
second baseman Carlos Baerga and
Texas catcher Ivan Rodriguez
moved into the lead at their positions in AL voting for the All-Star
game.
In voting, which ended Monday.
Baerga bas 687,222, and Rodrigue.z
576,268 votes . Baltimore's Cal
Ripken Jr. has the most votes of
any player with 1,009,509 at shortstop; Frank Thoma.&lt;of tl1e Chicago
White Sox . leads at first with

Summer league
games will continue
Girls' summer league games
will continue tonight at River Val·
ley High Scbool for Jr. Vanity and
Varsity players at River Valley,
Meigs, and Eastern. The league
continues play each and every
Tuesday with the possibility of a
day off next week for the fourth.
For futher information, call your
respective varsity coach.
Tonight a pool party will be
held after the games.

504,269, and Wade Boggs of the
New York Yaukecs at thiro will)
547,504.
In the ou tfielo, ·Seatt le's Ken
Griffey Jr. continues to lead will)
841,483. but will miss the game
because of a broken wrist. Albert
Belle of Cleveland is second with
693,579, followe&lt;l py Kirby Puckett of Minnesota (631,486) .
NEW YORK (AP) - Hideo
Nomo of the Los Angeles Dodgers·
was selecte&lt;l NL player of tl1e week

Sampras advances...- . Conilnued from page 4

Also winnin g Monday was No.
7 Wayne Ferreira. while seeded
women capturing first-roun d
matches were No. 6 Kimiko Date,

No.-8 Gabriela Sabatini, No . 12
Amy Frazier, No. IS Drenda
Schultz-McCarthy and No. 16
Helena Sukova.

Continued on page 5

Send Us Qour

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THE POMEROY DAILY SENTINEL
wiU be publishing a

HOLIDdll
COO~BO:O~
Included in the cookbook will be recipes from
Meigs County residents, at no charge.
The recipes will be categorized as follows:
• Appetizers/Beverages • Bread/Grains
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Please, include your name and
phone # with recipe.
Deadline for all recipes
is October 20, 1995

$18'888

JUU ~ tillB lll ~ullllBU l Ptillll
ISave $6000 I
BRAND NEW '95 314 TON CONVERSION VAN
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• $.500

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Quailed e.,..

ISave '13311

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• $500

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TOU FREE 1·800·822·0417 • 372·2844
344·5947. 422·0756

Monday • Saturda,: 9 am • 9 pm
Sunda,: Noon • 6 pm

.

�hi• a • The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Tu•day, June 'ZT,

1•

One

niiht when Erie WU OUI of

IOWII, AI and I WC111 one IIICp 100 far

Dear A.. Laden: Several yem
iao.l fell in love wilh my hlllband's
belt friend. I seued lhat he fell the
• e way about me.
• Even lhough my marriage was blah
Inc! bloodless ('At's' was, 100), we
lejecrcd the idea of an affair because
pc die children involved. I would like
10 llllkc it clear lllat bolh "Eric' (my
husband) and 'Rita' (his wife) are
very decent people. There was never
alcoholism, physical abuse or

and became intimate. It was lhe
beginning oC1! brief affair,IOI&amp;IIy flat
and disappointing, 00111 all what we
had ellpected. I was deeply
emblrrused, and so was AI. Our
friendsbip IUII'ercd because oC it, and
we SlOpped socializing. Eric never
questianed why, and neilherdidRita.
One good lhing came out of lhe
mess. I had a fn:sb appreciation for
my husband. (Thank heavens he
never had a Clue.) It made me realize
what 1 wonderful man I married.
Here's the problem: Two years .
have passed, and I would like to
lellCW the friendship wilhAI and Rita.

I mils the COIIIJIII'ioaship we had u

couples, and ao does Eric. He
IUQelll from time to time lhat I
illvire them over for dinner. I still
lbiDk fondly ofAI. WMt do you say?
Yes or no? -- UNDECIDED IN

RIVERSIDE, CALIF.
DEAR RIVERSIDE: I vote no. I
III'OIIgly ll'IJl"'CI there arc ltiU 1110111C
smoldering embers In what you may
perceive as a burned-out alfair. My

rue.

advice is don't play wilh
Our Ann Landers: I want to
thank you for your continued efforts
to educate the country about the
dangers of secondhand smoke. A
recent anicle in Consumer Reports
makes it clear that it is now a proven
fact that secondhand (sidestream)
smote acwally contains toxins that

are deadlier .to lhe innocent nonlllldter than mailllbJC8DI ll1IOke Ia 10
the penon who is liiJiting up.
A DCWiplper ad published by RJ.
Reynolcb lut spring said a noosmoker working amana 1moking
c:one.pes inhales the equivalent oC
only one and one.qUirla' ci~
• monlh. It stated that 1 waiter
working full-time in reSI&amp;UI'IIlt
breMhes only two cipreaes' worth.
Those IIIICIIICRts are nonsense.
Here's die trudl as il appeared in
Consumer Repons,January 1995:
'Secondhand smoke is different
from inhaled smoke. It consists
mostly of lhe sidesueam smoke that
curls from lhe smoldering end of the
cigarette when the smoker isn't
inhaling. Sidestream smoke contains

higher concentrations or toxic
· aubstances, includinJ several dial
cause cancer." -- OALEN A. ELLIS,
DIREC'IOR. TOBACCO PREVEN·
TION PROJECT, MARTINEZ,

dial?·· MA1T PROM BANOOR.
. WIS.
DEAR MAn .Jut •Y· ,...._
Mom. ~~ a compliment." She11

get the pk:lure.
~'
Ocm oflbe Day: PCiople -'ly pl ':
DEAR GALBN ELUS: Thanka whit's CXJIIIing 10 them- unlea itwa's
for the doc:umentalion. People need lllliled.
.
.
to know this. Non-smokers arc
Htmtmublulupiagflllligltttwl
foolish to allow smokers to ..IUbject doll~ WGIIIID pi illliOI!ied ilia -1? ,
them to deadly lOll ins. IIIIIC them to •1\ Coll«tioll of My FGWJrll4 Gf!rru
~ up. Nobody hu the tlaht to of the Day" is the perfo~tlltid-lltWI'
give you c:anc:ct
IIIIJ/e. Se/111 a ulf-tU/dlc~d. loftg, :
Dear Aan Lucien: My parents business-size e11velope a/Ill a clwd:t
are divorced; Every time I do or mo~~ey order for $5.25 (tills:
somedling wrong, my mom says, ilu:lwles postage aNJ lwtdliag) fo: :
"You are just like y.our fathec'
Collectioll, c/o A1111 ~rs, P.0. 1
Thisbothersrncbcc:aUIC llhillltmy BozllS62, Cllicago,/11. 60611~562}
dad is 1 reaDy nice p)t How lhouJd (ill Cllllllda, $6.25).
..
I answer my mom when .she says
l

r

!
••
•••
•

Trustees discuss funding at meeting of Ohio Valley libraries
Funding was tbe topic of discus- ing, but Anderson stated lhat the
sion at tbe recent mee1ing of tbe · Obio Library Council bas not yet
Board of TrusleeS of die Obio Val- infonned bim bow these additional
ley Area Librapes held at tbe Sys- funds·wiU be tlistributed.
tem Headquarters in Wellston.
Funding for OVAL increased by
Director Eric S . Anderson 3% and $200,000 per year was pro· reported the status of !bat funding.
vided for tbe four odler Chartered
Public Library funds - tbe regional library systems. The Ohio
Library and Local Governmen1 Public Library Information NetSupport Fund
work (OPLIN) was reduced by S5
(llGSF) was mainlained at 6.3% million from the House version of
in "permanenl language", bul was the budget. according to the direcreduced to 5.7% for 1996-97. The tor. Anderson staled !bat Ibis will
Senate added $10 million to Ihe require each member library to
fund to provide equalization fund- acquire from their own fun.ds the

local hardware needed to connect
The Board, on recommendation
to the network. Anderson estimated of Theora Bradley, personnel comthis 10 be around $7.000 per miuee chairman representing tbe
library.
Portsmouth Public Library,
Anderson reported dlat lhe Swe approved a series of motions. They
Lib111ry Board approved both tbe included an average 3.5% raise,
Stale ;md Federal Grant applica- baseil on the total salary, for
tions for 1995-1996 on June 13. On employees. Also approved were
the
. changes in die personnel policy and
recommendation of James B. Stub- an increase in the mileage reimbins, State Library Board member bursement rate to $0.30 per mile.
from
Mr. Burcham , representing
Zanesville, OVAL will be provided Briggs Lawrence County Public
'
.
nearly $700,000 10 fund operations Library,
for next year.
recommended and tbe Board

TUIIday, June 'ZT, 19815

,.,..•..

:Jt&amp;H SAWMILL
~

·~

32124 Happy

t

· Hollow Rd.

Brie Ides

--

LINDA'S

lnterler &amp;
Exterior

presented. Members will hold a
special meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m. to
give tbe obligation so new members may go on to receive their
fifth and sixth de~rces.
Visitors from Hanisonville gave
the literary program on the theme
of Father's Day. The meeting
closed with refreshments served
afterwards.

Carpenter awarded merit scholarship
Andre~

Wilson Carpenter, son
of Dennis and Alita Carpenter Carroll, was awarded a $4,000 renewable scholarship from Proctor and
Gamble Corporation upon his
recent graduation from Dulaney.
High School 'in Cockeysville, Md.

Bernice Carpenter of Pomeroy
weia to Maryland for ihe graduation of her grandson.
Andrew was one of 27 in his
class or 365 to receive the National
Meri1 Scholarship.
He plans 10 auend Virginia Tech

and major in electrical engineering.
His brother. Matthew. is a senior at
VT and is active as a member of
Phi Beta Sigma social fraternity
and vice-president of Beta Alpbi
Psi accounting honorary.

Public Notice
Public Notice
roqulrtmtnlt of Section ahlttd amount, from a bank,
153.54 of the Ohio RtviHd doing bualneu within tho
Coda.
acopo ol Ohio Banking
N0 T E :
ALL Lllwa, will bo accepted ••
CROEQN~:'tt~OT~ SSUBMI~! complying with lht bonding
roqulremenL
CURRENT
"EEO"
At a prer•qutalle for
CERTIFICATE OR SHOW bidding, . only MBE
PROOF FOR SUCH A BITUMINOUS SUPPLIERS
CERTIFICATE . WITH THE · thai are qualified MBE
FORM OF PROPOSAL. BIDDERS
will
be
FAILURE TO DO SO WILL contldorod. Each anvol 0 po,
RESULT IN REJECTION OF con.talnlng tho propoul,
Sutton Townahlp Trueleea PROPOSAL
mutt ba ~lalnly merktd,
Blda ahall be aealad and "R ound g, .c..r.
1ft p ro1ac1a •.
Peul S. Moore, Clark
32785 Ploaoant Vlaw Rd. addrtultd lo: Molga County Bid Speclllcatlona may ba
Racine, Ohio 45771 Comml .. tonora, Courl picked up at lho Molga
(8) ·27; 1TC
Houoo, Pomeroy, Ohio County Englnoor'a Office,
45769. All blda thall be 34110 Folrgrounda Road,
marked "Bid lor Recordor'o Pomeroy, Ohio.
Public Notice
Office Alteration•" on the
The aucceaaful contractor
oulolde ol lhe onvalopa. may b·e required to lurnloh
Minimum Wogo Roleo, and tab work as required by
PUBLIC NOTICE
Equal
Employmenl theMelgaCountyEnglnaer.
Seolod ·bldl will be Opportunity and Minority
The Meigs County
acceplod 01 the Molgo Buali1ea1 Enterprlee Commlaalonar1 raeerve the
Caunly Commlulonert' Roqulromenla •• .provided . rlghlto accept or reject any
office, Court Houoo, In Chapter 4115. Section or all bldo and/or any part
PomorGy, Ohio 45769 unlll 9.47, Section 123.151 ORC, lhereol.
1o:oo o.m. an Friday. July 1. Admlnlatrollvo
Rule
Ro bort H. Eaaon, rnE
. ., PS
•.
1885, lor ollorallono and 123.215-02, tho Governor's
Meigs County Engineer
remodeling ol tho Molgo Executive Order of January (6) 20, 27; 2TC
Counly Recorder"• office.
27, 1972, and amended 1-"'===-=----· Coplao of Plana, Governor'a Exacullva Order
Public Notice
Spec Ill catlono,
end 84·9 are applicable to this
Propoael Blanko logelher bid Invitation.
with any further lnlormallon
No Bidder may withdraw REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
BID NOTICE FOR
doalrtd may ba obttlned by hla bid wllhln alxly (60)
DESIGNATED ROUND 9
Prime Contractor~ from the dayo altar the aclual dele ol
(S.C.I.P) PROJECTS IN
OffiCI of Ralaar, Valantour &amp; lhe opening thereof. The
MEIGS CQUNTY, OHIO
Cellahln, Archllecta, Inc ., Molga
County
Bid propooola lor Ill work
131 Wut Slate Stroot, Commlaalonari reaerva the
Athena, Ohio 45701. All rlghl to wolve any dttcrlbod heroin will be
bidding document• will be Informalities or to reject any received by lhe Board of
Malgo
County
forwarded thlpplng chorgeo or ell blda. · I'
Commltalonoro In lht Court
collecl upon rocolpl of o (6)20, 27; (7)4; 3TC
House, Pomeroy, Ohio unlll
dtpoalt In lhe amount of
10 A.M. on Friday, lha 7th
$25.DO (25 dollero) per oot In
day ol JULY. t995. The bldo
favor of Rolaer, Valontour &amp;
~Ill be opened at 1:30 P.M.
Public Notice
Callohtn, Archlttclo, Inc.
on Friday, lht 71h day .ol
The dtpooll will be
JULY, 1995 and read aloud.
refunded lo blddoro who
Tho propoaal~ will ba an
REQUEST FOR'PROPOSAL
return the plana and
BID
NOTICE
FOR
In place bid; Including all
epeclllcallona In good
DESIGNATED ROUND 9
labor, equlpmont, and
condlllon wllhln (10) daye
(S.C.I.P.) PROJECTS
materiel nocouary to
alter receipt of bldo. The
IN MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO . comploto work lor each
coot of replacomenl of ony
Bid prapooala from MBE protect •• lollowa:
mlul ng or damaged
documonto will be deduclltd BITUMINOUS SUPPLIERS
Job-95·2
C·28
from lho dapoolt. The low will bt received by tho Raclne/Kenll Roaurlaclng
bidder may retain the plana Board ol Melga Counly Pro)ecl from St.248 to Sl.
and specification• and Comm1 0alonara In tho Court 124.
dopoalt will be refunded.
·Houoe, Pomeroy, Ohio until
Job-94-3 C-32 Eagle
Subcontractors arid 10:00 A.M. on Frldey, lht 7th Rldgo Rood Raaurlaclng
material aup pllar~ . may doy of July, 1995. The bldo Project lrom C-281o Sl.7.
Each bidder mutt lila a
acquire ,
for
their will be oponad at 1:40 P.M.
convenience, Plana and on Friday, tho 7th doy of 10% performance bond al
Spoclflcotlono or portion• July. 11195 and road aloud.
tho limo of lhe bidding and
Thlo will be on MBE the aucceaaful bidder muat
thoroof by paying lor the
file a 100% parformenc1
coat of reproduction and PROCUREMENT
handling.
CONTRACT lor aupplylng bond. A loltor oolobllahlng
A!l quootlona rogardlng AC·20 bllumlnouo liquid cartlllod llna ol crodlt, In lho
tho plana and opaclflcallono delivered to lha daol,natod ototod amount, from a bonk,
ohould bo addreued lo the plenl of tho oaphalt doing bualnon within lhe
concreto ouppller. Thla acopo of Ohio Banking
Architect.
mBIIrlal a hall conform to Lllwa, will be occopted ••
CONTRACTORS
tho Pertinent Slate of Ohio complying whh the bonding
~EQUIRING ASSISTANCE
N SECURING BIDS FROM Doportmanl of Hlghwayo requirement.
Aa • prarequl•lta for
CERTIFIED
MBE Conatructlon and Melerlala
bidding,
only
SUBCONTRACTORS AND Spectllcatlon Manuel.
THIS WILL BE A TOTAL CONTRACTORS thol are
SUPPLIERS MAY CONTACT
THE STATE EQUAL. TONS BID : Tho . MBE Quolllltd ODDT Blddtrt will
EMPLOYMENT
CO- Suppll~r will bid lotal lona be conoldered.
Th1 auccoulut contrector
ORDINATOR BY CALLING of AC·20 LIQUID thtl can be
814-486·8380, OR THE dellvtrod lor a llxod amounl may bo requlrod 10 lurnllh
any lab work lor roturlaclng
MINORITY
BUSINESS of $25,000.
Each blddor muol fila a protocla 11 required by lho
DEVELOPMENT DIVISION
BY CALUNG 814-48&amp;-5700 I 0% peilormonco bond et Mofgo County EnglnHr.
Tho onvolopo, containing
.OR TOLL FREE ON 1-800- tho time of tho bidding and
aUCCIIIIUI bldder mutl flit tha propooal, muat ba
282-1085.
Etch bid mual be a 100% performance bond. plainly morkod, "Round 8
tccomponltd by • BID A lottor oatabllthlng S.C.I.P. Projocto · Job·85-2
GUARAfi4TY m..tlng the cortllled lint of c..clll, In tho C-28 Roclna/Kono; or Job
Public Notice
PUBUCNOTICE
Sulton Township Budget
lor 19H will bo approved at
lho Ragullr Meeting,
Mondoy, July 3rd at 7:30
p.m. In lht .. Syracuae
~unlclpal Building. The
public Ia Invited ta altend ..
Any roaldont may . rtvlow .
·tho B~dgot at tho reoldanco
ol tho clerk, by oppalnlment
titer ~uly 3, 1995. Phone
948-2194.

Public Notice
95-3 C-32 Eagle Ridge
Road.
Bid Spaclllcallona may be
plckod up at the Melga
County Englnttr'a Olllco.
Office houre are between
7:30 A.M. and 4:0ii P.M;
Monday through Frldty.
The Melga County
Commlulonora reaervo tho
·rtghl to acctpt or reject any
or all bide and/or any part
lhereol, ond may requoot
the Meigs County Engineer
to proceed by Force
Account, ond will accopt lho
boat bid lor tho lntonded
purpon, AND MAY
REQUEST THE MEIGS
COUNTY ENGINEER TO
PROCEED BY "FORCE
ACCOUNT."
The award of a contract

by ' lha Board af. Melga

County Commlaalonara, to
the auccaaatul bidder, will

bo conlln·goint upon tho
following approval:
1- By lhe Meigs County
Proaacutlng Attorn1y.

2- Upon recelpl by tho
County of a "S.C.I.P.'"
Funding

Agraam1nl for

William M. Breedlove
Air Force Senior Airman
William M. Breedlove, son of John
Breedlove of Coolville, recenlly
earned tbe Good Conduct Medal
for demonstraling exemplary con. duct in the services.
·
Breedlove, a signal intelligence
production specialist, is based at
the Wheeler Army Air Field in

Timothy C. Wright
Navy Seaman Timothy• C . .
Wright, son of Anita Wrighl of ·
Coolville, receqtly. participated in :
tbe eighth annual fleet week cele:,._
bration in New York, N.Y ., aboard-;
the U.S.S . Nassau.
•
This year's parade of ships '
passed the Statue of Liberty. Aects :
from Canada, Denmark and Italy, ;
along wilh tbe United States, honored tbe sacritices of World War II •

Dawayne E. Wilson
Dawayne E. Wilson. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Wilson of
Pomeroy, recently enlisted witb the
Air Force in P..trkersburg, W.Va.
Witson will perform his sixweek basic training at lhe Lockland
Air Force base near SanAntonio,
•1
Texas. Wilson will train in aircrafl . vetemns. •
annament systems.
Wrighl had just completed a six- :
Wilson graduated in 1993 from momli deployment to the Mediter- :
1\le Word of Faitl1 Cbrislian Acade- ranean and Adriatic seas supporting •
my and will earn credit~ towanl an intemational efforts off Bosnia.
!
associate degree.
. Wright graduated in 191J3 from :
Federal Hocking High School. . :

The Community Calendar l•
published as a free service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar is not
designed to promote sales or
fund raisers of any type. Items
are printed as space permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specific number of da)"s.
TUESDAY
POMEROY - A special meeting of Drew Webster Post 39 ,
American Legion, Tuesday at 7

p.m . at the hall. All executive oflicets and trustees are asked to
attend. ·
POMEROY Americaq
Legion Auxiliary, Unit 39, Tuesday
at 1 ·p.m. at the haU.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Free clothing :
day will be held Thursday at 10 :
a.m. :1t lhe Salvation Anny on But- ;
ternut Avenue. All area residents in '
need of clothing are invited to !
attend.
SATURDAY
:

'

RACINE- Racine Grange will
meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. Obligation
will be held for all new members.

\

SALEM CENTER
Star ~
Grange 778 and Star Junior Granl;e :
8 78, Saturday, 8 p.m . at tbe •
RACINE - Racine Area Com- Grange hall located on County. 1
munity Organization meeting 6;30 Road I north of Salem Center. All
- comests to be judged.
!
p.m . at Star Mill Parle

conlelned
porleblo
screening plant
· Bid opoclllcetlono may be
plckod up et lhe Melga
County Englnoar'o Olltce or
lho Office ol lht Boord of
Molgo
County

Tim DEADLINE HAS BEEN
'EXTENDED FOR
~~BY SEJ\'~

··

...~~

v

WANT ADS
AilE JUMPIIii
liTH IWIGAitS

LIW
LAWN CARE
•Mowing
•Trimming
•Firewood
Also:
Contract Work
614·992·5291

Light Hauling,
Shrubs Shaped

Ext. 1327,
'2.99 per min.

and Removed

Must be 18 yrs.
ProcaJICo.
602·954-7420

Bill Slack

Misc. Jobs.

NEFF REMODELING

1·900·Date Line

BAILED TO
YOUR NE.EDS
'~ 949-2512
F &amp; A 1i'ee Service

.,

Unisex Someone special In your area
Is seeking that dream mate to share a

MEET

1·900-776·3005 Ext. 9387
$2.99 per minute
18 yrs. plus
Procall
7420

Of All Lifestyles,
locally or ·
nationwide.

1·900-945·5500
Ext. 7898
$2.99/mln. 18+
Procall Co.
602-954-7420 &lt;12111 mo.
·COMMUNITY
CAB CO. INC.
Owners: Robert Barton &amp;
Harry Clark
992·9949 ' 992·6471
Mon - Fn .a a .m. · 6 p.m.
Sat. 8 p.m. • 5 p.m .
Sun. by appt. only
Serving Pomeroy, Middleport
&amp; surrounding area.

•
•
•
•
•

Howard L. Writeael
ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR

Sidewalks •
Driveways
Patios
Porches
Slabs

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

992·3265

949-2168
5116194 TFN

1m .

Love

&amp; Romance

Pro call

ROBERT BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FREE ESTIMATES

Fate Awaits You!

1·900·726·0033
Ext. 6250
$2.99 per min.
Must be 18yrs.

(602) 954-7420

MY BUSINESS

Give Yourself The
Sports Edge with
The Sports&amp;
Entertainment
Line

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE

110\\'\HI)
K\C . \\.\Til\(;

(614) 949-3005

""'-

HAULING &amp;
EXCAVATION
Umeslone &amp; Grave~
Seplic Systems, Trader &amp;
House Sites.
Reasonable Rates
Jae N. Sayre
614-742-2138

1·900·263·1800
Ext. 1986
$2.$9 per minute
Must be 18 yrs. old.
Procall Co.

(602) 954·7420

61611 mo

"

o\~c;c; ~

"9:

s~'\1.\l,c

'
'

.J .

-

fJr Ol!lf!ltf!tp.jj;'a'f!!J'!Ilti(tj..flfiJiJJJIJJ
Get Your Message Across
With A Daily Sentinel

BULLETIN BOARD
s6°0 column inch weekdays
saoo column inch Sunday

Hurry, Picture Deadline is Friday, July 7

28 Years Experience

PHONE

1-800-377·4477

614·245-0437

Authorized AGA Dis tributor
Welding Supplies • Industrial Gases • Steel
Sales &amp; Fa bricatio n • Repair Welding
Aluminum/Stainless
No job too large or too small!
Oxygen Acetylene COo
Helium all sizes Med ical Grade 02.
Propane Trimix Ultra Mix Mig We lders
' ph 773·9173 FAX 773-5861
108 Pomeroy St.
Mason, WV

·

•Room Additions
•New Garages
•Electrical &amp; Plumbing ,
•Roofing
•Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting
Also Concrete Work
(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

I CITY &amp; STATE

I

: CIDLD'S NAME(S) &amp; AGE

;

GOLF LESSONS
CUSTOM GOLF CLUBS
CLUB REPAIR
TROPHIES
PLAQUES
BADGES

John

Teaford
Chester

2 Malo Full Blooded, Bauon

AKC Regloterod

lomoi&lt;l Engllill
Bulldog, genlle. ~lng. 304-e75-

Rutlwul Ft•ed &amp; Farm Supply
Ft•t•tl For All } 'our Animals
(:om - ( ,'radwd Com

~~~=~goodoqulroll

Hound, One : 1 Year: One: 5
- . . 814-11117·7202.

NOW OPEN

f)o~- lforst•s -

-..

Giveaway 4
112 Norwoglon Elk hound, 112 .

m•.

S..lilulkiaon1.304-I?W44

Cmr.-

Ftw pupplel ta goad homo. 81W811.

·Suit Hloci.-

Friendly Calico Klnen, llnar
Trained, lntldo Homo Onl,, 814·

-.-7:

Uutlwul Ft•t•d &amp;Farm Supply

Kittens, loll Of MaiM.

Hutluml , Oil 742-26.56

814~1·

0.17. •'

5;31

Long &amp; ohorr haired klltl&gt;nt. colors.
110mo ha¥• e - · 304-171·
Zlll4.

Bulldozing, Backhoe,
Services.
Home Sites, Land
Clearing, Septic
Systems &amp; Driveways.
Trucking· Limestone,
Top Soil, Fill Dirt

Pomeroy, Ohl()
1/12/Un

J&amp;L INSULATION
539 BRYAN PLACE
MIDDLEPORT. 992·2n2
Office Hours: Mon.-Fri.

8:00 a.m .~3:30 p.m.
Vinyl &amp; Alum. Siding,
Roofing, Vinyl
Replacement,
Windows, Blown
Ins ulation, Storm
Doors, Slorm
Windows, Garages.
Free Esllmales
t/twttn

TONY'S PORTABLE
WELDING

Lost: Black &amp; Tan Female Coon
Hound , 8 Montha Old, Vicinity:

Radiator Repair .
Se rvice Portable
aluminum we lding
·New radialors
availab le,
recores also.

last: Bleck &amp; Whhe Female Car

LW&gt;&lt;o1n Piioo, et4-443476.

-=

400 Block Fourth, Reward! 814·

81...-.2871.

l 011: One Black t.IEMOREX
Camcorder Batter,- Saturday In

The Vicinity Of The Galllpollo
Public Uae A.rea. Reward. Cell

614oo441J-28N.

70

Yard Sale

614·742·3212

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
778 and
Oliv9rJul)'St1,Middiopor\
9-5, 28,
r - - - - - - - - - - - - - . ; . . . . - - - - , 30,
in &amp; outside, raW

ELIM HOME
Adult Care Jt]
. Facility I 1 I \

AB&amp;T AUTO

3RD ST., RACINE, OHIO

992·5042

L-------~---------~
SEND TO:

..
•

The Meigs County Council on
Aging, Inc. and staff invite you to
attend a retirement party for
LEAFYCHASTEEN and
EVELYN CLARK.
The event will be held on
Thursday, June 29th from 1;00
p.m. to 3:00p.m. althe Meigs
Multipurpose Senior Center.
We hope you will join us in
honoring them.
The public is cordially invited.

ahine, lamps, vanity, weed eater,
porch !urnilure, curtains, bed ·
1preads. mobile CB antenna, end
table, XL men '• clothel, 38x32 .

949-2882

iot.,.toro.
ALL Yard Sales Muat Be Pold In
Advance. DEADLINE; 2:00 p.m. ·
the day bolo•• the ad II to run.
SUnday edidOf' • 2:00 p.m. Fnday..
Monday edition · 2:00p.m. Satur· ·
pon11,

Owners: Ed Chaney &amp; Richard Moore
.1 4 Years Experience in Area

For low income
elderly &amp;
handicapped. Family
home atmosphere
wfT.L.C • .

eALIGNMENJS ·•BRAKES
•TIRES •OIL CHANGES

day.

Barn Sate, Moved: loft Clothot. '
tO ,. 12, u . Curtains, Btddlng,
Looking fonl'(rrd /0 seeing o/d friends
Houoehold, Antiquoo. Old Lln&lt;11,
Furnilure, Large Sale. Second •
muh11a k·ijtg new.1
5119/trn Hou18 left Bladen Rd From 2t8,
8129 , 6130 , 111, 9·1 No Prior
~-----------------,· _Sa_~_.,______________

L--------....o;..;;,--:------...1

6/9/lln

~~..~f~slf';J.'H'~~~ ·

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilels rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monlhly rental rates.
Job sites • Cam~ Sites • Faml! Reunions &amp; Part. ias
•

,

REFlNANC.E
PURCHASE
CONSOLIDATE

Slzo Womono Olothn, An· ,
Appliancot, Truck Toppor l Bod
Liner, • Wheeler, Av!•• Comf* ,
t!~ ~';;i1!:;'~~~~~ully),

lg.

tique Gla11. Fumhure, Home Int. ·

•

Pomeroy,

Lin1estone, "'""''· Gravel and Coal

Heart·To-Heart Cardiac Support
Group Meeting Thur. June 29,
7 pm PVH
Downstairs Col),ference Room
. Speaker: Judy f.r'ennessey AN
For more infer. 304-675-7222

I
I

•

1112:1.

40

L,.....--~..;,;,;~~:.....::...;~~...:;...-..___....1

;J

-· ..

····-·

&amp;

..

t:

- •• -

.....

992-3954
Emergency Phone 985-3418

'"'

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity
All Yard Solea lluat Bt Poid In

.Advanc:e. Deadline: 1:OOpm rM
dll)' before lhe ad 11 to run. Sun·

dey edition· I :00prn Fridoy, lion·
10000.m. Saturday.
'Nd Ju,. 28 &amp; 30 at O&amp;W
Pilollco, ru_. Plaint. lola ol
bop dolh!ll. tift to l up. Spon.
oored by lloy Scout Troop 2U

• day edition

Bankruptcy, Judgements, Slow Credit

Our Specialty

1-SOO-MERIT-98

'"""Chooloo.

MB#0489

BABY Sentinel

30 Announcements
CHERDI&lt;EE SUPER BINGO Ju(J .
ID-~:~00::.~1 :!: :

. '

· Alzheimers &amp; Related Disorders
Support Group Meeting
Thur. June 29, 1 pm
Pleasant Valley Nursing &amp; Rehab
Center For More
Info rmation 304·675·5236

; PARENTS' N A M E - - - - - - - - - - - - ;

P.O. Box 729 • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

At HJ OUNCEMENT S

· 7'ficho}sYMefa}s .

MODERN SANITATION

r--------~--------,

The Daily Sentinel

• Lots of Fun and
Learning .
• Lots of
Experience
Mon. thru Fri. 7:00
A.M. till 6:00P.M.

992-5388

7/22/94

CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155

The Baby Sentinel is a Special Section filled with photographs of
local kids, ages newborn to 4 years old.
The Baby Sentinel will appear in the July 14th issue of The Daily
Sentinel.
Be sure your child, grandchild or relative is .included. Complete
the form below and enclose a snapshot or wallet size picture plus a
$5.00 charge for each photograph. (enclose payment with picture)

Submitted By

DAY CARE

~

~t

I
I ·.

TAMMY HYSELL'S

MIKE MARCUM'S
ROOFING &amp; REMODEliNG

Rt. 12·J.

Call for rate schedule
Min . $2 .00

Residential &amp;
Office Cleaning
PLUS
Pickup &amp; Delivery
Service
Owner/Opr.: Tom Lane
Racine, Ohio

LI CENSED &amp; BONDED
FR EE ESTIMATES

3115mn

CHARLIE'S
CONCRETE

SINGLES

Roofing, Siding, Room
Additions, Concrete, etc.
P.O. Box 220,
Bidwell, Oh. 45614
(614)388-9865
24 Hour P~ger­
AnHring Servic
1-800-215-2023

SHINGLES • SIDING • WINDOWS
BUILT UP &amp; RUBBER ROOFING
RESIDENTIAL &amp; COMMERCIAL
f~UBBER ROOFING FOR MOBILE HOMES

and all the pleasures of life. ·

lnauraa • Experienced ·

IIIPIOilllliif

.We Have Cars and Vans!

life full of lov~. romance, happiness

Call Wayne Neff 992-4405
For Free Eotlmales

10.1

Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.

,o\\\1.\

992•2269

SAYRE TRUCKING

~

Houit Repair I
Remodeling
Kitchen &amp; Both
Remodeling
Room Addition•
Siding, Rooflng, Patios
Reasonable

Kenny's Auto Rental

Kenny's Auto Center
1-800·486· 1590
264 Upper River Rd. · Bus. (614) 446-9971
Galli olis, OH. 45631
,.,.•

985·4473

511&amp;11 mo.

: FOR SALE

614-992-7643

811311 mo.

. 1-900·945-6100

HAY

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

""

Just Call

ALFALFA
AND MIXED

New 11omes • Vinyl Siding New
Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing

( No Sunday Calls)

985·3879

TREE TRIMING
AND REMOVAL

!
'~
..

·

Dlaselln)ector SVC
InJector Pump SVC
Tune-ups

ABfiRq
~·~~-- Yours!

S

Commlaalonara.

Tho Boord of Melga
County Commlaalonaro may
eccept the low..t bid, or
oiloct the belt bid lor tho
lntendod purpou, ond
raaorvao the right to accept
and/or reject ·any or til bide
end/or any part thereof and
will award 1 contract to lhal
bidder which Ia In tho beot
lntarool of Meigs County.
Approved by:
Robert H. Eaton, P.E., P. S.
Molga County EnglnHr
(6) 20, 27; 2TC

HAULING

:r;mming · Topping·Removal
1
Stump Removal
20 Years Experience
"
Guaranteed
~992-6351 &amp; 992-4447

Robert H. Eaoon, P.E., P.S.
Malga County Engineer
(6) 20, 27; 2TC

One new or uaad aalf

WICKS

Community calendar

Contractor.

REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL
NOTICE TO EQUIPMENT
DEALERS;
In accordanco with
oectlon 307.86 ollho Ohio
Revlaed Codo, aoolad bldo
will be recolvod by the
Boord of Molgo Counly
Commlaalonara, Court
Houoe, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, until 10:00 A.M. on
Friday, July 7, 1995. The
bldt will lhon be opened
and rood aloud al t :45 P.M.
on Friday, July 7, 1995 for
the following purchaoe:

(lllttst- lllw Riles)

I

Round 9 protoclo from The
Ohla
Public Workt
Cammltalon.
3- The IUCCeiiiUI bidder
muol meal all requlromenta
of the Ohio Public Worka
Commlaalon •• e Proma

Public Notice

814-985-4110

~oblle Welding

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

(614) 992-5535
(614) 992-2763

SERVIa

PAIIIIIIG &amp; CO.

Grange welcomes new members . ----Military news----.
Hawaii.
He graduated in 1990 from Federal Hocking High School.

Cullom Building &amp; Remodeling

. 614-742·2193

(Specialize In
• driveway spreading)
Limestone,
Gravel, Sand,
;Top Soli, Fill Dirt
61~992-3470

Timothy M. Ryan
· Army Pv1. Tim01hy M. Ryan,
son of Michael and Linda Ryan of
Syraucse, recently completed basic
training at the U.S. Army Infantry
School in Fort Benning,.6a.
Ryan graduated from Southern
High School in 1990.

SMITH'S
COISTIUmOI
•NEW HOMES
•ADDITIONS
• NEW GARAGES
•REMODELING
• SIDING
•ROOFING
•PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES

Middleport, Ohio 45780
~ Danny a Peggy

•

•

FREE
ESTIMATES

. . ...... 11111

Take lht pain out of
ptlntlng. Let ua do It lor
you. VllfY 'reuonabte.
Free Eatlmates
Before 6 p.m. leave
menlge.
After&amp; p.m.

were also approved.
Visits. to Star 'Grange on July 1.
and to Pamona on July 7 were
planned. Officer elections will be
held at tbe Aug. 10 meeting, it was
announced.
. 1At lhe July Pamona Grange
meeting the fifth degree will be
exemplified in full form and on
July 29 the sixth degree will be

The Dally Sentinel• Page 7 '

,,..•'

approved, travel for Anderson and committee memberships.
-. ;
Member
The Board ratified lhe purchase •
Services Librarian Gail Zacbariab of a new Xerox fax machine for • ,
10 attend tbe American Library
Interlibrary Loan functions . Tbe ;
Association annual meeting in Interlibrary Loan contract with ·
Chicago in late June.
Alden
:
Anderson said be intends to · Library at Ohio University was ;
dedicale most of bis time in die also approved as well as a contract •
placement service, trying to identi- wilh
•
fy candidates for the Access Ser- Optimum Cleaning of Jackson for :
vices
routine cleaning or tbe facility.
t
Coordinator position . Zachariah
Wanda Eblip serves on the ;
mainL'Iins important Children's ser- OVAL Board as a representative of ·
vices
die Meigs County Public Library. :

· Racine Grange· 260!5 met recently and approved tbe donation of tbe
silver march monies to the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish for lhe
flood victims.
Five new members were accepted and four reinstaiements into
membership were made. Plans for
painting tbe roof of tbe ball and for
exhibiting a1 die Meigs County Fair

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

••

CALIF.

a

. .

(

-

Woman shouldn't play with fire .when it comes to past affairs
infiddity iDvolvecL The problem boredom IIIII zero.minus-10 leX.

-

Racine
Gun Club
Trap Shoot
Every Wed. Nite

5:30p.m.
Everyone
Welcome

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing in Cusrom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013 OR
l'l92: 5553 OR
TOLL FREE 1·800·846·007
DARWIN, O~J~, TF~

80

Public 5ale
. and AuctJs!n
Rick "'-ar110n Al&lt;cllon Compony,

KIN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

au cllon

-Factory Authorized Parta .

~185 Or 304-1'13-54o47.

tun Ume aucrionMr, comp~te

&amp;Service
•AII.Makee -42 Veart
•Faet Reliable S.rvlca

•Waahera • Oryere • Ranget
•Retrigeretore •Frwzera
•Di•hwaehere
•H.W. Heatert;

-Microwave• •Diaposala

•Thankl Molgo I

Surrounding Araat

(614) 985-3561 or
992-5335 12/U/tfn

Htvk:e.

Ucen..d ,

tM,Ohlo &amp; Wool Vlrglnlo, 304-

.'"''o/"

90 Wanted to Buy
Cleon lott Model Caro Or
Trud&lt;o, 1017 Modolo Or N-&lt;.
Smith Bulcl&lt; Pvndoc. 1900 Eliot·
.----,..:----:---f om-..., GolllpoliL
DKoreted

tlonewara, wall te51- •

DAd...,_ okt '*''....,...
old - . , antiqu. -.mltura.

phonM.

--

Rlv.rtne Antlquu. Rue1 Woore.

ownor. IU·OD2·252e. Wo buy

'

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�•

•

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,

Tuesdily, June 'D,:1115
Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 • The Dally Sentinel

Tueeday, June 27, 1995 ...

Pomeroy • Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel • Page 9 •

AIJ.EYOOP
BRIDGE
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
BEA1TlE BLVD.® by Bruce Beattie
1877 Doclga Van. 11 Pll-gar, •
81,S00ml., 360 engine, auto., P5- ,.
PB. rear heatllf', lighl Wua. 304- ..
875-30311.

Country Furnlture-Furnltur• far
Every Room. lln'i., R. 2 Norf!, Pl.
Plauanl30U7UI2D.

J &amp; D'o AIIIO Potu and SoNqe.
bu1int wrecko, Junk autoo &amp;
lllld&lt;a. Alia. 1*11 lor aalt. 77).1343 .. 713-5033.

-·lui

T.ap PIICtl
•
Paid: All Old u.s.
c;:ainl, Gold Rinal, Sliver .Colno,
Gold Colno. M.T.s . Coin Shop,

lluftic V.lley, Apple Grove,
2ac loll. public waror,
Clp.._.Jr. 30U7W338.

1il'l - - - · Gtllii&gt;Oiil.

RENTAlS

Wanltd To 8u1 Liltlt T,keo In
Qood Condition: tcltchen Set,

Hall-

Alto--

5 piece parlor group, excellent

........
4 ·U

~-~~­

L..----------r----------i
r

Antique Satllr Rtlurblohad, Ex·
calientconclitlon,81 ........ 341a.
Buy or sell. Riverine Antiquea,
1124 E. Moln Straa~ on RL124,
Pomaro,, Houro: M.T.W. 10:00
Lm. "' 8:00 p.m., Sunday 1:00 "'
8:00 p.m. 81 4-992·25211.

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

540

aalary Info: 708-284-1600, ext.
IlleS, 8am-8pm.

a 3br. apr., New Haven area,
Broad Run Rd .• S2851mo plua
aleclric, ref. I dep. req. ~-882·
2221.
2

AVON I All Areas I Shirley
Sperart. 30+875- 1421.
AVON SELLS AT WORK-HOME
Need Additianallneome?
A-$8-$15Mr: Benofit&gt;l
TorriiOry Oplianal. hlimp.

SorMOnt nMded ..,enlng1 and
maehe Mil tD care tw .aderlr ~
an In her home near Pomeroy.
Appt1 ill' wrill~ Tho Daily ~~·
nel, Cia 'Bo• 728'~0, Pomaror,
Ohio 4676g, giving oxporlonco,
,.-.... &amp; wago rOCJjr....,..,

1-8CJ0.742-4738
AVON Ef&lt;fUf U$ 11 home-at
""'rll. Ail ataaa. 304·1162-2645, 1800-at2-e356. INOIREP

Sludonll· Page Poolllon AI Dr.
Samuel L. Bo..ard Memorial Ll·
brary. lolull 8a AI L1011 18 V..ra
Of Age. Main Oullol Aro Shtlvlng
And Sholl ·ROiding. Evenlngl
Bat.waltttf' Needed In My Home, And Weakenda, 12 Houtt Per
Mutt Be 18 To Apply, Reference• Weak, Year Raund, Minimum
A Mulll14-441-11g5.
~EOE. CoR614-446-A:AD
Circulation Desk Clork Poaidon AI WANTED: EMERGENCY RE·
Dr. Samuel L. Bosaard Memorial LIEF COMMUNITY SERVICE
Llbror,. Some Evenings And WORKER(S) Needed At Two
Weekends, FuiJ.TI"'!e, ·37 112 Communltr Group HOme• For
Houl'l A Week, BeneMa, Compul- Adulll Wllh Learning Llml&amp;aUona

or K.,board Skills A Mull, EOE, in Galllg:llo And Bldwtll, High
Caii61~EAO.
School graa, Experlanca, And
Good Drlvi~ Record Required.
Data Collector ParUme rell~ble Houra: AI Scheduled/At Needto coltec:t public record ln.. ffd. Salar)': S4.751Hr., To StarL
formation 11 local and IUrrounding Send Reaume To Cecilia Baker,
40ourthouaes. For oppottuni ~ to PO Bcx 604, Jacklon, OH ~­
periO(l

make additJonal money, while

Deadline 'For

Applicania:

716185.

working you're own houra 11 In· Equal Opportunity E~.
dependent contrac:tor. Send tt· I ~;,;.;....;.:;:;,..-:"'-:-"'7"'---

1ume 10: Lima Calleclor, -4400 We are an old local company

Mac Arrhur Blvd. 1740, .Newpoft aeaklng a motivated peraon to
Beach, Calilornia 92660
take chaigj of cuo"'mor dthrory,
Eorq up "' S1,000 IIHIIIY •"fling
-P'OII horne. Start now. No
oxpariance. Fraa ouppllaa. Frao
information. No obUgadon. Send
s.A.s.e. ro Pr111tge Unit L. PO
Box 1Q58m~. Winter Springe, Fl
327t8.

Eaay Workl E•cellent Payl As·
aemble Producta At Home. Call

Toll free, 1-SOD·4ftJ·SSOO, Ext
313.

Hiring Sales Representative• Few
House or uord: E•cellent Be.,..
flta, And Pay Free Kit To Start,
Fantaath;; Hoateaa Plan, Alto
Socking Partiaol 6 1 &lt;-'~l'll- 21 g 7 ·
Immediate;Opening for full-time
RN at e&amp;-bod ll&lt;llod nurolng lacl~
tty. Excellent opparwnlt~ ta Jain
N io~ term health c:&amp;N field lor
variable shU II. Point Pleasanl
Nuralng &amp; Rehabllltadon Cenrar
(tormarl)' Carehaven~. State Route
82, R1ute 1, Bol( 320, Point Plea•
ant. WV 25550 (A Glenmark Aaoocia181 FaclltyJ EOE.

·lmmecliate Opening• : E~callent
opportunity ta join the long term
health care field. Seeking part·
time LPN'a for varlable ahiftl for
66·bed oklliod nurolng laolllt,,
Point Pleaaant Nuralng &amp; Reha·
bili&amp;alion CeniM (lotmerty Carehaven) StaiB Aou• 82. Rouce 1, Box
326, Point Pleaoant, WV 25550.
(A Glenmatk Aaaoclatea Faclllry)
EO€

Mlscel~eous

Merchandise

Alltnllon Pomerov : Poltal poal·
liono avalloble. Pormanontlulllimo
for derkll aorttt'l. Full benell1a.
For exam date, application and

showroom HIUPI and WlmthoUI·

All real estate adver1islng in
tills newspaper Is subject to

the Federal Fair Housing Act
of 1968 which makes it Illegal"

to advertise "an"y preference,
limitation or discrimination
based on race , color, religiOn,
sex familial status or national
origin, or any4ntentlon to
make any such preference,
limttallon or discrimination."
This newspaper witt not
knowllngly accept
advenisemenls lor real estate
which Is In violation of ihe law.
Our readers are hereby
informed thai all dwellings
advertised In thls newspaper
are available on an equa\
opportunity basis.

REAL ESTATE

·

t.like'a Lawn Care; Mowing
Lawna, Trimming Hedgea, WHdeatlng, At Reaaonable Pricea,
Also Other Odd Joba, Call Mike
An~t lma For A Free Eatimatel
81 4-379·9111 .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Waotwood Drive
!rom $226 to $291. Walk to shop
&amp; movieo. Call 614·•46·2566.
Ell\lal Housing Opportunity.
For Rant: Furnlahed 1. Bedroom
Apartment, Next To Ubrar~. No
Poll, 811 188 Bill&lt;.
Furnlahed Elticlency, All Utilities
Paid, snare Bath, S145JM·onth,
g1g Socond Ave. Bt«4&amp;$45,
Furnlahed .Eftlclency $195/Mo.
Ut1111iea Paid, Share Bath, 607
Second, Gallipolis, 614·448""'-418
Aflar 7 ~M .
Graclous living. 1 and 2 bedroom
apartments at Village Manor and
RIVerside Apartments In Middleport From $232-5355 , Call 614·
992·585g. Equal Housing Oppor·
bJnitiel.

310 Homes for Sale

eo. Sand ruumo clo Tho Dall,
Sentinel, P.O. Bo• 729-09, Pomor- 2-acory' garage, beside New Ha·
,IJI'~:,::OH~4::578~g;.;
· ·~-:-:::-::--­ ven Supermarket, bottom noor
complotaly remodeled, 2 .bayo:
-:
(front bay .CO'x21', rear ·bay
1'80 Wanted To Do
32'•23'), 100'x•o· lot, $18,500.
Me Traa Sanrlco. Complelo Uaa 304-ai!-2783.
care, 20yrs. exp. &amp;. Insured, lree
estlmalea. 814·441·1H~1 or 1- 3 Bodroomo, 2 Bollll. Heal Puq&gt;,
Gaa Furnace, 1 Acre, Gatage.
800-508-8887.
loon Aroa. $82.000, 81•·387·
Chrlatlan daycara for 1995-08 Add
7lll7.
school year, planned ~~:llvltitl &amp;
1e11ona, reference• available. 3 L••R• &amp; 1 Small Bedroom,
26'x2• Kitchen, Dining, Fam111
304-676-4417.
Room Combined, CA, Wolk To
General Maintenance, Palnllng, City Schoolo, Large Back,...,, 1
Yard Work Windows Washed
112 Story Brick, 614·446-2153
Guuarl Cleaned Light Houling , Andl.otwMaCommerlcal, Reak:lentlal, Stl\le:
Duplex opt, building, good lnvHI·
014-4ol8-6881 .
ment For Information: 304~175Georges Portable Sawmill, don't 46110.
haul ~our logs IO•the miU juat call
:J04.67S.1957.
lnt~nlor &amp; el(terior painting, low
prices &amp; free eatimatea, 81,..892·
5859

2Room1 Plus Bath; Lafayene
. Uall. No Kll&lt;:henl .aJI Uoidea paid.
1175.00 Monlh&lt; llopoo~ Roqulrod.
814-446-7733

Four bedroom houte lor saletree gaa. two atory, I#Jprox. 3 acr·
n. Bradbury.._ B14-9112-4111l0.
Four Room, Baih, Baaement ,
Dock, Out Of Town On Rt 7 Land
To Rlwr $35,000 614-4414431.
Newly romoclalad houoa, 3br, ., 1t
2balh, largo lamil, rocim, large livIng room. garage, fenced in clou·
ble lot. Camp Conley area. 30-4·
875-~.

Prolenional TrH Service, Complete Tree Care, BUcket Truck Reduced for quick aaie· six
SOrvlca ,50 Ft Reach, Stump Re- rooma, 1 112 bath, full baa&amp;ment
moval, Free E.aclmalesl In- with garage, ver, nico. Make oHer
aurance, 24 Hr. Em«gency SefV· and move right ln. By owner,
Ita -Call And Savel No Tree Too $28,000, 614-9112-5122.
Installers Wanled, Bring Resume Big Or Tao Small! 81-4-388-96-43 ,
Toi Bob's Eleclfonlca, Man -Sat. 81 4-367·7010.
320 Mobile Homes
BQrwwen 9 A.M. -8 P.M. Na Calla
for Sale
P\ease.
Sun Valley Nunery School.
Chlldcare M-F eom-5:30pm Ag01 1o4x58 mobile home, -4.5 acrea,
Join th e long 1erm health care 2-K, Young School Age During
11101. • year old fUrnace, ma,
litl.d. Soaking parl· time C.rtiflOd s~mmor . 3 Dayo per Weak Mini- ,_
new lurn l ah l no• ~ S25,00D, 814Nursing Aural8ntl tor a 88-bed ~m 81 4-448·3857. ·
80-52•7.
skilled nursing facility For warltJ:H
ahifta. Point Pl eaaant Nursing &amp; Wanrad To Care For The Elder~y 1g12 H....tta. 1&lt;&gt;ttl&lt;, , _ carpet
Rehabilitati on Cent•r (former!~ In The ir Home. Have A ldvlng air r:ondldoning, gao heal, $7500,
Carehaven), State Aoule 82. Ro-- Heart, Complete Care. 15 Year1 814-9112-41332.
ute 1, Box 326, Point Pleasant, Explrl,nce, live In, Daya Or
WV 25550. (A Gtenmark Aaso· Nights. Due To Vial ling Fam ll ~ Didn't Sat: 1874 Klrltwaod 14•70
ciatoo Facihy) EOE.
Call Me In Hllloboro 513·3g3. 3 8odrooma, Excollanl Condllion,
g324, Ask For Bod&lt;y.
Make Offer, ~14 ·~9619, Evon·
Lady to ti¥8 1n with elderly worran,
lngo.
pays $150 a week, retarencaa,.. Will Cart For Chlldcare In Uy
quirod.cal 6t 4-742-207ll.
Home, Dagroe-in Early Chlktloocl 1883 Mansion 14x85, 814·4-41 ·
Davalopmonl, VInton •. 814·388· 0955.
Larr y'o Bod, Shop, Auto Bod~ 8832. Gtoi-3811-DOI7,1locky Hall.
Man, Exper~ , 614-367·7444.
Umltad Ollarl 1996 doublowlde,
Will c1o lackhoe wori&lt;, phono el-l- 3br, 2bath, $18D5 down, S25gl
Local Tr.uh Company Needa
month. Frte deliver~ &amp; aetup.
3l 73 or 81-4·992·5858.
OriVet W1th COL't Experi enced
Only a1 Oakwood Hamaa, Nitro
Only Neod Appl,, 8t•-38S-g8ae Will Do lntarlor, Ex""ior Painting, WV. 3)4-755-5515.
C4tt Bo'-1 g.5.
.
Rooaonabla Raitt, E-lencod,
Needed Babyalner For saturday Reterencea, For FrH Eatlmattl, Now 1g95 14x70, incl.udeo okirt·'ng, etepa, bloc;;ka, one ~ear
And Sunda ~ .Only, For Mort In- 0081.,.24&gt;5755.
homeowners inaurance and aiJ
formation, 81.,446·'a247 After 5
rnonlhl FREE lot- Only S1025
~ M.
'
FINANCIAL
and $207.17 ,... rnonll. Call
1.atlQ.II37-3238.
Ou talde Sa ilu man, Commercial
Printing Ca. Need1 Aggreuive, 210
Business
New Bank Repo1. Only o4 left.
Sell•atarter For Full/Pari Tlme.
NrMorii'ladln.3l4-755-71g1 .
Opportunity
F...-..:11 City Prell 611 ue 131!3 ·
:::,~=:::;:=;:-;:::;:::::-":':::=-=-:
OAKWOOD HOliES, Nluo, WV.
INOTICEI
Part-Tim e Experienced Medical
Tranocrip ~onlo~ Apply In P9roon, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Oiract fllclory aal11. No middle
Medical Ptau, e38 State Route recommends lhat w-ou do bUll· man. Sova l t,OOO'o, 304· 755·
180, Gallipolis, Between 0-6, ntll with ~pit ~ou know, and 5865.
NOT to 10nd mooey through N
Monday Thru Friday.
rpa U until you have lnveatfgated Price Buoterl Naw 14x70, 2 or
31Jr, Only $995 clown, 1185/rnonth.
Pari· Time, Mature Person Wlrh ""'ofltlrlng.
Fr•• delivery I aatup. Only at
Sewing Knowledge. Able To Work
Anr Da,, Anr ~mo. Apply: JoAnn For aa1t or nda olhar pro110111· OekwOod Homao, NitrO WV. 304 f abrlc'l. Slhror Bridge PltiZll . Gal- ()No Rlvll Cimpgroundt, 2:11 IIIII 756-5885.
lpoHo. No Pluta CaiiL
-Pl.
bulltlng. hu
hun hotel room•~ lhrH aparl· 350 LOts &amp; Acreage
P.raona Wanled With Plt.. ant mente, apact for more. an furValet For Telephone Salea, nlahad Including ~ding mo-• .15 Acrao Of Land With 21x32
Evening Houro. Call 11-8 P.M . and IOciL Will ftnonca. 114-- a.iltlrlg On Cflt1 Chlpal Road, 1·
2!1211,
'
eoo-37-«101, 811 446 '1308
814-441-o3117.

•rva -

3 Ton Canral Air Oondltiontr
Pad&lt;aga,
o. 5p11 1111m
11.250 lnllaliad, 5 Tr. warranty
All Parll, 1·B00·267-e308, I14U8S308

s

Nice 2·3 bedroom apartment In
MlddletlOI~ 614-992·5858.
One bedrDom apartment in Pt
Pia-sam. turnillhacl. clean &amp; nice,
no poll. Ph0na30&lt;-ll75-1386.
Ona bedroom furnished apart·
man~ udlltias pelt!, references and
depoall requlrOd. 3 112 mlleo
soulh of Ulddleport on SR 7, 814367..0011 .
One bedroom furnished upstairs
apartment In Middleport. all ulill·
tlea and cable jncluded, $330/mo.
1
2 2 59
plusclopo~~ca 61 4-99 · 4 ·

Concrete &amp;. Plaatlc Sepdc Tanka,
300 Thru 2,000 Gallono Ron
Evana Enterprlaet, Jackeon, OH
1.atlQ.537-11528.
Electric Wheelchairt, Electric
Scoa18r1, Naw/Uood Scoolar Ulll,
Stalrwa, Elavatora, Lilt Chalro,
Bowman'&amp; Homecare 8t4-448-

Excarclll Bl~e. Ulad \lory Ullla,
$50, 614-ol46..:147.
Hoopltal bad lor oala, 304·773·
5587.
Hotpolnt troar-tree ret_
rlger8riu,
good condition, 1100. 81o4·H2-

JET

AERATION MOIORS
Rapalrod, New t RabuUI In s-.
CoU Ron Evono. 1.atlQ.537·g528.
large Collection Of Colla: 15
Madame Alpandera Okt Oolla Of
ComposiDon And Of f1ubbar, Aioo
Newer Onao. Black Dolla, Indian
Dona, 2 Marilyn Monre'l, Complate Set Of Chrlaay Gro-Halr'a
Dalla, Cabbage Patchea, Pta
"Wee Herman, 2 Charley Weav ·
trl, MIB Pappln Fre1h Doug~
DoHa, Sat Of A· Team, . Many
Morol Buy 1 Or Alii Darlono Me·
Kinney, 614-387-loiQII.
Life Size Barbie Doll. 114·246·

Upstair1, 3 Roomi &amp; Bait (1 Bod- RCA VHS Camcordar, cuo, Vldroom), Furnlohtd, Clean, Relar· oollgh~ tripod, excellenl condldon,
once and Dapeoil Raqulrad, No $300. 30U75-7122.
Poll 61 ......... 1518.
1.:;::..:.~.:..:.~------::---:Refrigtr"&amp;tor. $75; BuM cofflmak·
450
Furnished
er, $20 ; 1mall r$frlgerator, UO:
614-1149-2528.
Rooms
Rooms fot renl ~ week or month.
StarO~ 11 $120/rno. Gallla Hotal.
614-446-9580.

RefrlQaratorl, Slovea, Waahera
A'nd Oryttl, All Recandltlonad
And Gauranteedl $tOO And Up,
w•o.w..&amp;14-11611-8441.

Sleeping rooma with cooking.
Alao trailer apace on river. All
hook-ups. Call a11er 2 :00 p.m.,
3)4-773-5851, MaoonWV.

Riding mower, 11 hP. 36" cu~ Dr·
namark, good condition, tcoo.
304-4175-5792.

For rent· commercial building In
center of downlown Middleport.
Central air and heal, 8 1 o4~ 9SJ2 245ll.

470 Wanted to Rent
Marr'-d co.uple aeeklng a hoult
In Pomar.,!Middlllflllrl 0100, 2 br.,

&amp; Pam

Schwinn Alrdyna •~erc:lae ma·
chino &amp; a body ill' Joke macl11na;
aleeper aota, eJ:cellent condition,
614-687-3765 night&gt;.
Soga Garnagaar wiAC adapllt, 3
gomoL $90 lor ail. 304·576•21141 ,
Springfield Armory Mil-apec, .
4SACP.Iike new, 304-875-6182.
STORAGE TANKS 3,000 Gallon
Upright, Ron Evana Enterpri ..l ,
Jacltocn, Ol1lo. 1-800·531-D528.

FWocalion Family
Want To Rent In Ohio. Clean ,__.
BR Wl ln 20 Min. Of Bridge. lla,
Consider lease W/Optlon On _.
BR. 71•·952-06&lt;0.

Tandy PC wfprlnter &amp; modem
$500. 304-875-3328.

. MERCHANDISE

Waahar, Excellent Condition,
$'1DD : Dryer Naeda Work UO;
Exarcioo Bike $50; 114--441-GD01

510

Household
Goods.

630

Pets tor Sale

Graom Shop .f'al - , luling H1dro Balh. Julie ebb.
Cell 814 441 OZJ.t.
8 - Old AKC Cou Spaniel
Pupplao, Sholl I Wormed, Dow
-814-251Hf887.

.

I Moa Old Pu~plu, Part C'-,
Pat1 Colllo. 1 Black I Brown: 1
wti~8U

118 8881.

ACFA 3 Mole Himmlayon Soal
Point, Blut Paint Flame Point,
I100Each, Nog.,81..._1811.
AI&lt;C ~ Sponiolo. 1 1arNJa. 7
maioo, gila dockarl &amp; clawo
•-ad. 3 tricolor, 1 black. I •
black &amp; while, 11111 oholl given,
1100. alto female copper nota
Btaglo, $30, only 13 wko. old,
814-9112-3252--

Americln Coc:ket· Sp•nlel Puppin, AI&lt;C Ragllltrad, Champion
Baoodlna. 81 4-370-2728..
Blrda, lgua,.s, Tarantulae, mka.
FJah Tank &amp; Per Shop, 2413
Jackoon Ave. Point Pleaoant,
30&amp;-875-20113.

72113.

One Year Old, Spacious 2 Bed·
room, JUI[ 4; MIIes From Galllpolia. Appliance&amp; Furnished, No
·
Smokers, No Pets, $450/Mo. 5887
$400 Deposit, Applications At: Movie Sale : VIdeo Store Remo·
1743 Centenary Rd . Galllpoljs, dellng Appro•. 110Q Moves; 200
614-448-22Q5.
Adult Movlea, Would llka To Sell
Twin RMira T-. -ICCOI&gt;Iing All Togolller. 814--367.Q812 After
appllcationa lor 1br. HUD oubold' 5 P.M.
lz",!:f" lor alderl1 and handl- ono Drake Sottl~to ayotam $800.
ca
EOH 3)4.875-Ge78.
on• FlahertYamaha stereo aya300
Upalalra apartment. Furnished, l·lem-..;$_
_ · 3l4__862
_-3446
__._ __
carpo1ad, cable &amp; ulillllao paid. Orlando- lour hotel nlghto. near
Nlct, q11iet ·$350. Referenc11, Disney, use -anytime, paid $300,
Oopooll304-87S.1816.
tteii $99, 81+.J0.2G96.

460 Space for Rani

560

1100 Honda 0t1a111. Naocll Worlt.
88·1~1~4~18~10CI5~:__ _ _ _ _: 1AKC ragloloracl Baoglo p•ppleo,
7 waako, from a proven hundng
Solll'btd, lln&gt;llar, lwing. 0811Nt .._ $50 -h, 814-4182-43112. .
high c:IIU. 30&amp;-815-4548.
AKC Ragllllrad Cocktr Sponlel
Black Flborlllall Camper1op Far pupa. 11111 aholl &amp; ..,....._ $100.
Full SIZI Truck. Sliding Sctaan 3)4-773-SOlll.
+A Ugh\ 814-367·7883.
AKC raglllerad Dalmallan pup·
Socii By Rod Wing CNHH-B ..0 .piH, 5 lamalo, 2 malt, $250, ftrst
To ·50 Degre11, • · rown &amp;hota; mather &amp; lafttar •vallabla,
Guaronlaacl, Lowell Pllcao, Tho 814·gQ2-572•• ahor epm 814·
Shoe C.te, 814-118 4W
li$2-81D4.

3301.

::.;.;.;--:-::::--:-:-:::::-:--:-;--:::;::-1 mid
to large yard, Bill
Sladt, t-304-1162-3368.

m-

2Q2 International Oieael power
unit S500 needo work. Salellllt
dish, 1,r old, S500 . Two woodbutnlng ttove• l75ea. Two alec·
lfic: oll .htaterl S50ea. 304-8751295.

s,.-

Unlden llt,lllte syatem, taso,

"""' ttell. 304-4115-4417.

EV8IIingl.

Baiera AKC 3 Male Brlndl••·
$000 Each, 814-3711-Q208.
Dutch Netllorlond D-1 Rabbit&gt;,
01 ._3111H15n.

::..:.==:::::;:;._-:;--:-:-:"-:;;:Liquid Wormera Nol Doing The
Job? Ask J D NORTH PRODUCE
81•·4&lt;6·1g33, About HAPPY
JACK TRIVERMICIDE. Rec ognized sate &amp; Effacli'la A~lnll
Hook, Round &amp; Tapewotms In
Dogs&amp; Colli

lo1ale ·good
1 1/2yr1
old, clog.
very
gonde,
wll be
brooding
3)4-675-4815 .. 30U75-5518.
Proreulonal Pet Grooming. By
U11, Leave A Ma11aga I'll Get
8ldt. 814-2SH550.
Rabbita lor oolo. .......0 Allan, Rt
1 Box 284, Galllpollo ferry, WV.
304-1175-4413.
Two Doberman pup1, 814-992-

5449.

570

Musical
Instruments

Guitar Fender talecaat•. vintage
whlta, axe. concl., $465. 3:14-875·
•2&lt;9.
.

580

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

Cabbage, u-cu1, larry D. Turley
Produce, John Hill farm, Letart
Fan, OHn
Raopberrleo U· plck, $1 a pint or
we pa1 10u $1, Vlrgil'o Barr1
Pilch of Rt. 124 0811 of Syrocu10.

Arabian mare, genda baglnOara

•"

.109764
•K9B7

Motorcycles

SOVTH
•AKJIOB

•K Q 3 2
tA Q 3

s.-s .

I Foalbell div.
12 Reign
13 Drama11c

'IS

100 lba. rountf baia hay, oul of
lltld price, call e1•-g•g·2t61 or

21131.

South

I.

1g79 Manta Carlo, new point new
rnolll, lou than 35,000ml., $1500.
30&amp;-875-5542.
1981 Ford Granada Great lnterior.- And Exterior, Low Mileage,
61+258-1012.

760

SOUTHWESTPICK..UPAt.RTS
Beda, Cabl, Doora, Fenders And
Mora. 3 Mlleo sOuth Of Gallipolis
1984 Marcadao Benz SOOSL, 2 AI Juctlon Rl. 7, &amp; Rt. 218, 814Soall, Son Top l Hard Top. Low
767. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Mlitl, Good Condillon $19,000 ,"""
__3__
81 ......... 7127.
,.

1964 Pontiac Bon,..llle LE. 304·
675-eee9.
1985 Honda Accord LX, maroon
Inside and out, loaded. exua nlca,

78,800 mllao. S4150, 614·992·
2511Hflar llpm. weekda,a.
1985 Mazda 5 Spd., Sodan, PS,
PO, AMIFN Cauette, Sun Roof
35 MPG, Excetlenl Condition,
S1,200, 080, 81•·3111-2645.

1978 Llldaa 23 Ft. Motor Home,
New Exterior Paint, Tires, Banary
&amp; Furnace, Carpel, Awning,
Clean, ExceUent Condition! 28,000
Niles, Alking $8,950, 114-4411:096=3::.,:_.,_,_1;_4:_6:_6211::;:5.-,---1
1993 Coleman Cheoapaake
ca.,_ Like New, $4,500, Coli AItar 8:00 At8.14-446·7321.

1985 Ol~s Cutlass Supreme, Excellent Condition, 36,000 Milas,
$4,850, 814·258-6808.
1988 Uonta Catlo LS Excellent
Condition, $3,000,614-388-9842.
1988 .Ford Escort GL 5 Speed,
Air, AUIFU Excellent Condition,
$1 ,400,080, 614-37D·2645.
1988 Ford Tempo GLS. .4dr, 5spd,
air, good condition, t2,60G. 304-

87s-3997.
1986 Ford Tempo Good Condl·
tlon, t1,995, 2 Dears, 5 Speed,
814-446-2248.
1969 Ford Festive LX, good conclition, M;, AWFU lllaroo, $1 ,.00,
3:14-273-33:17.

1t92 Chevy Cemato. air, am-tm
caa~ane, now tlraa., axe oond., 1· 30&amp;-875-40011.
1g93 Toyota Corolla LE, auto.,
loaclocl, .... c:ond..304-4175-41194.
1g84 Ford Thunderbird LX, 014·
ol41-®55.

1995 Ford Fl50, acyl, longbad
IUIO, air, cruise,_till. 304·875-

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

SERVICES

Home
Improvements

1g87 To,olio pickup, 5 opaad,
$2000, 614--9112·7410.

18811 Ford lruck, low mileage,
good condtion. Phone 304·875-5185, 304-875-1126, or 304·67511960.
113 lntamodonaiiNI70, 350, 1 Dop.
WIWtl Une, 7Q Fruehauf trailer ~5'.
110,000 llrm, 814-742·236g.

7•

North
Pass

Pass

Pass ·

2•
3•

5•
Pass . 6 •

lrene -

East

22 Heavy wood
24 Campus area
25 Edible
seaweed
26 Forever
28 - on (spoils~ ·
30 Singer Laine
31 Composer
Jerome 33 Musings
35 Grated
40 Hazier
43 Taun1s
_
45 Taco lopping • :
46 Above
, •
47 Wail
48 De ~: again
50 Viewed
51 Ancient
llal ian family
52 Fu1ure LL.Bs:
exam
.55 Compass p1.

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

An early
decision

~

PEANUTS
I'VE DECIDED TO TRI{ TO
8e A SETTER PERSON ..

',

6UT NOT RIGHT

MA'&lt;8E A FEW
DAi'S FROM NOW ..

AWA'&lt;, OF COURSE ..

~·

;
,.
••
,,
'
•

TONIGMT'S feATV,~ STOilY IS
AIOUT AN .ALAS!CAIII C.ITY TMAT
tMS NO MO,t MUS~IE.f/

·:
•

•
•~
(:
.,
·•
;
:

...'

In the semifinal of lhe Women ' s
Teams at the Hridge Federation of
Africa, Asia and the Middle Ea st ' ""'-+-+-Championships , held la st spring in
...-+-li-+-1
Amman, Jordan. the South Africans
played brilliantly to defeat a S1rong
Egyptian team 22H7.
In the final against india. the South
Africans made many more errors, yet
CELEBRITY CIPHER
triumphed 164· 154 .- The re~ ult might
.
by Luis Campos
have been reversed but for this ambi Celebr~y C.iphll!f cryptograms i re Cl'eated horn q uotal oons by famous people pa st ana p&lt;~~nl
tious grand slam, played by Merle
Eactl !eht!r m lhe cohe r st ands for itOOiher TOCJay ll clue M equal.s B
Modlin of Johannesburg.
Six diamonds showed the diamond
'E H
PGD
WLZAD
ZRD
king and denied the dub king.
PGD
Y F W P
Declarer drew trumps and immediE YL F NP Z H P
W L Z AD
EW
ately continued wi1h the spade ace. king
MD P . V 0 D H
and jack, West playing low smoothly .
What should South do? Aller only a mo· . PGD
ozrlw .
ZHH ZNYWPNFHR .
ment's hesitation, Modlin called for a
PREVIOUS SOLUTION : "Arrogant, pompous. vain, verbose , a show·oH- I've
club from the dummy. The rulfing fi·
been called all of these . 01 course, I am.
Howard Cosell.
nesse worked and the grand slam was
home .
The audience applauded, but it would
have been belter play for declarer to
TIIAT DAILY
cash her diamond winners first. When
PUlZLII
East turns up with five diamonds, the
- - - - - - ldlted by CLAY 1. POUAN - - - - - - ruffing finesse looks much more attrac;
Rearrange leners cf the
live. However, perhaps the best line is
four tcrambled word1 beto play on spades after drawing only two
low fo form four words
rounds of trumps with dummy 's ace
and South 's king. When West follows to
ROC ENE
the third round or spades, dummy ruffs .
If spades are 3-3, ·ail is well. And with
the acluai layout evetj1hing is fine too,
because the defender with lhe doubleton spade started with only two trumps..
M

1

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S@ .tt4t\~-~£~~,-~

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BORN LOSER

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WL, 1-\1\RRY 1\T

YOO KNOW 1-\0IJ
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r

, -Pr.-A
j5 -r.p:-rry
j&amp;l j._s-,--1.
I 1"':;,.;

t-'-.1""' "" STIJPI D

MID IT~ RI6KT
BY 11-\E. Gt.J&lt;...F!

w~~-------

'•.

...

USE filS cet\00
FeR 1\ 1-ff.K.

rl

-

_

.

.

Comic to his audience."Laughter makes you feel good all over
and showing it in - - - • •• ' • "

--,1 Q

~C;:-;I-:T;-:-;N-:E:-::-P

t'-T,7:;-T,-,,-,,-.,,,.8-·4
•

•

A

•

R

•

_

_

~n9~5;_·_~~-~----- ~

PRINT NUMBERE 6

...

Generai Home Main·
ttnence- Painting, vinyl aiding,
carpentry, doors, windows, butha, •·
mobile home repair and more. For
tree esdmate call Che1, 814-9926323.

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

C&amp;C

STRIKf A81.1JW IN

~~~ ON

HIGH PRICES. SHOP THE CLASSfEOS.

Check this out. Firat Save $$$ lntet"tor/el(terior t)ajn[lng, root pai{U· ·
lng, handwaah dDIW" houses &amp;
mobile hDmes, odd jobs·, nea~
work. Guaranteed, 15yra experience. Relarencea. Free ettl · .,
mateo. 304-875-11921.

..

.

Brogufl - Quill· lmagfl - Ve nous . ALONG

A ftiend, who doesn't like to gossip, says you show
. maturity when keeping a secret gives you more satisfaction than passing it ALONG .

JUNE

;
(
~

t

~

.;
•

•
•~
• \\

'"
•
A:STRO · GRAP.H
ahead by mailing $2 and SASE to Astro·
Graph , c/o. thiS newspaper, P.O Box
4465. New York, NY 10163. Ma~e sure
to slate your zodiac sign .
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) II mig ht necessary to act a bit more assertively today to
collec1 on a deb I. Try to ma&lt;e your presentation without generating ill wilt .
VIRGO (Aug, 23-Sepl. 22) New inlerasls
have greater chanCes for success at this

BERNICE
BEDE OSOt

. 0e3

•.

'

lllil•••~

-·~

""" M" ~- .... "· " " ""···,

C\t)ur

give up on pro,ecl s you 've attemp ted,
jusl set !hem aside temporarily.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23 -0c1. 231 Keep .you r
obj~ctiv es foremost in your mind at all
limes today. However, proceed towards
Wednesday, June 28, 1995
them unobtrusively. Success is Indicated
In the year ahead , you mig ht fee l tar If you don·t make waves.
more courageous and daring than y ou SCORPIO (Oc1 . 24- Nov. 22) Th e
have in" the past. E n d~avors of a large impress io n you make on friends today
scope aren'l ap11o frighten you oH.
will be favorable and lasting. You ca n
CANCER (JIJne .21 -July 22) Wilh ou t back up your words wilh actions
being selfish, lry lo serve your best inler· SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·Dec. 21) Your
ests today. Somelimes this kind of con· success will be prQportionate lo the efforl
duel is eSsepliallo survival. Cancer, !real you expe nd l o day . II you yo a ll ou t,
yoursen Ia a bl~hday gift. Send lor your , something big could resuil.
As tr o•G raph predictio ns lor the ye ar CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19) ltl$p11ir)g

'IJirlhday

I

oth ers rs one of your be st altribu res
today , especially those ·you deal w1th on

a one·to·one basis . You r compamons
won't suffer from sagg1ng sprnt$.
·AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb . 191 Do not
hesilale lo pul lorth exira efiM on behalf
of another today . Later, when the bene fils are tallied . you 'll share in lhe relurns.
PISCES (Feb . 20-Mar ch 20) Bemg
thoughtful and tender today won 't dil ute
your strength. In fact , it will enhance it.
Oth ers will respect you more for not
using your clout
ARIES (March 21 -April 19) Us~ng your
creatiVe apt itude as a handyman could
provide you with enormous gratiffcat•ort
today . Chores can t,urn into fun projecls.
TAURUS (April 20.May 20) See&lt; activi·
ties today that challenge you mentally
and physically , bullhal aren't work·relal·
ad. Kee p you r mind and bo dy in an
i.m struct!Jred environment.
GEMINI (May 21-Ju,. 20) Your protec·
tive Instincts penainlng to persons you
love will impel you to Provide for their
.needs emollonally as well as materially

today .

'

rh~

POISO"'ED BY THAT
W&lt;JnANI I ..I\,IST SPENT

AN EtoiT I~E 50«XlL YEARSUFFERINIO THROLQ-1 ..
.... THI?OVG&gt;I . VH.

' '

Com olere
·chuc kle ouored
b y f•lhng 1n th ~ mtssmg words
you de..,elop from step No 3 below.

~ t ETTERS IN SQUARE S

I OOIH WANT AN'( Cl'
M'( 5U11MER VACATION

Appliance Parta And Service: AU
Name Branda Over 25 Veart EJ·
perlence All WOrk Guaranteed,
french City Maytag, 81-4 ·448-

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

-

0

,

WATERPROOF~G
::
Uncondilionai .Ufetime guarantee. r
lo~;al relerencaa furnished. Call
(6U) 4•6-0670 Or (614) 2370488 Rogara Waterproofing. Ea·
tabllohod 1975.

1895 Dodge Neon 4,500 Mlleo,
Etreollant CondldOI\ $10,800, 614- 'Install Paola To Decks, 814·448·
02111.
441-QSiol, s - . y Red.
Joe's Home Maintenance, vinyl
720 'D'ucks for .Sale
aidtng, roofing, exterior pain11ng,
610 Farm Equipment
power
washing, tree eatlmatea,
196B ChOV1 Dumprruck, 307 V8,
18,000, G.V.W.Iag racka, gravel 814-992--4451.
CARMICHAEL'S
FARM
&amp;
LAWN, 888 PlnocNII Dri'la, Gal· racka. runa good, $3500. 304~ Ron's TV Service, specializing In
Zenith also servicing moat other
llpollo. OH 4581•, 614-448-2412, 4511- I 7ll3.
1.atlQ.504-1111.
196g Ford 2 Ton Dump Truck, 5 branda. House calla, 1-800·797·
Spood, With 2 Spood Raorand, V· 0015, wv 304-576-2396.
UIOd Hay Equlpmanl:
a, Gal Er1gina, Quod Condition,
JD 327 SQu- Soler - 1»w Uoa • Can Haul Heavy Equipment,
820 . Plumbing &amp;
VG, 15.7511; NH 585 Squata 8alit $4,000, 61~514.
• Uta New 18.500: NH 853 Rourid 1878 1 Ton Truck, Excellent
Heating
Balor ; llko New $6,750: Now
Shapo,
81
•
·2•&amp;-11227.
ldoa g 112' Rake - Like New
Freeman's Heating And Cooling.
12,485: IH 27 Square Baler 1981 Chwy 112 Ton PU 6 c,un- Installation And Slfv lc e. EPA
•1,050 : IH 2•1 Round Balor der Stan'dard Trans., Stepalde Cartiflod. Resldendal, Comman:lal.
13,250: Dautz 3 Pt. Diac Mowor BO&lt;J, No Rus~ $1,395, 01.-446· 814--258· 1811.
.
WI Cond- $3.109: MF 725 T 2300.
Harblna $1,250: JD Alike g 112'
Rake 1750: JD 3D Slt:kle Mower 1ga• Chav1 S· 10 Blazer 4x4, 840 Electrical and
good condldon, 13500 OBO. 304$550.
Refrigeration
875-3581 ..... 5:30pm.
NM Hay Equlprnant
COMFORT ASSURED DEALER
2 -JD 335 Round Baiera, In 1g11-4 Dodgo 350, Dual Cab, V·8,
LAWRENCE ENTERPRISES
S10CII: 1 -JD 385 Round Balar, in 4 Speed. 2 Hitchea, Electric
Stock: H I S H1draulic Bilold Broke Set UP. Exctllonl For Tow- Heat Pumps, Air Conditioning, If
Ralta, In SIOdt: H &amp; S Slwu Tad- Ing I Good Conclidoni $3.500, 614- You Don't Call Uo We Both Looel
frao Elllmatao, 1·600·287-41308,
dora • • Ralor S2,850: H I S 448-1514, 814-4ol8-3703.
814-4ol8-8308, wv 002945.
NO'M Hay Wropper $5,850.
1g81 Chav1 trltc:lc V8, IWIO, lhort
bed,
run• &amp; laoka goad. 11 ,800. Realdenllal or commercial wiring,
UIOCIT-;
new aenrice or repalra. Master U1D60 JD 2240 • 530 Hro. RG &amp; 30&amp;-875-2074.
electrician. Ridenour
CancP1113,1100: 199• Ford 5030 1986 Ford 150, 300, 8 c,Nntltr, 4 canaad
Electrical, wvooo3oe, 304 -875MFWD S /Cal&gt; ·71 Hra ·Uke New Spoad, 12.400,614-992-8611.
1788.
$26,500; JD 2640 $10,900: JD
2g40 111,800: MF 135 Gao - 1987 S-10 4X4 Blazer, auto, ....,.,
Nic:a 15,250: Cub Lowbo1 W IW' good, 10000. Phone 304-675-$2.450.
1523.
1g87 To,ota Pick-Up A-1 Shapo,
Also, Murr1 Riding Mower 38"
614-387·7441 .

4NT
SNT

Wesl
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

BASEMENT

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

7 Barbarian
8 Goller Sam ~
9 Water
conduits
10 Roll up tightly
11 Rabbit
16 Arclic
inhabitant
!l'-,'l'll""'n'1""'1 . 20 Aclress

I

'·
810

5 Net!dlellsh

6 Tennis pro
Andre -

By Phillip ·Alder

D &amp; R Auto. Ripla,, WV. 304-372·
3933 or 1-B00·27.H3211.

1881 Olds Cutla11, new motor.

24 Can. poov.
27 Foo1no1e obbl.
DOWN
29 Hockey disk
32 In lha
1 French
preceding
. sloneware
mon1h
2 Mo1hao 's sister
34 Wioeone
3 Chimney part
36 Fashion
4 - la1ale

Opening lead: • 4

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

304-e75-&lt;41-43.

1911-4 Old• Delta 88, good ITBns·
ponollon. $1500. 304·458-17ll3.

ON LAYAWAY!!

'

=~:.a,:d~~~·n!~~~~ ~~ell.

790

TH' BOTTOM'S

A NEW HAIR·DO AN'
A PURTY
NEW
DRESS
II

'.

198D Four Windo Boat 18 114 Fl
Long 130 HP, 1 Owner, Gora~
Kop~ Low Houro. 81 .........11138. .

o

2•

EUY !I YOU GOT

750 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale

1993 24' Pontoon boot with lin·
dem axie tralltK. Aluminum hllrd·
lOP with roll down aide and back
Toblcco Plants. Watarbad plonto tnclo""" and loki Oul hont 80I'4&gt;
trim, 1
lor oale. Call 304·695-3954 alter M•cury, oil ~. ttainleaa and 1 aluminum "prop.
g:30pm. Danny Dewhurll.
'
leu than tDP houra, 2 marine
bollllfloo with - h . ono 12 gal·
TRANSPORTATION
ion and two • gallon gaa lanka,
- · hOur mator, 6 buovl.
2 anchon, life ring, fire exlln71 Autos lor Sale
guilhet, e ure ""' se.QO!l. 304'B1 Buick Regal, V-6, lair condl- 61S-2151oner64&gt;m.
llon, 1700,814--9112-41672.

(alre1chaa)
23 Mom'o guy

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

';

199• Suzuki GSX750R, 18000.
1g91 Honda CRSOO, $2000. 304-67
; -;;5-332ll.;;::::;::-;;;;;:;-;;::;:;:-:;;::;:::
4 Whaaler 1992 Yamaha Timber
Woll4 Whiaior. 614-388-g7Qa.

Premium oat/alfalfa rolla, S25.
s-. Morvan'• Farm, Rt 35. 304-837·2018.

14 Slaluo15 Count
17 Colfaa
diapan..,
18 Plant porta
19 Weilpropor1ioned
21- oul

... a

- · $500, 304-451-1
Bull Found In BidWell Area, 8 14·
19B5 Bomber banboat, 35hp
245--6325. ..
Mercury, ttolling motor, fish finder
lliva well. $2500.304-882-3195.
640 Hay &amp; Grain

.,

.,

Livestock

7116Q.

. Zenith 2s• Color Conaolt T. V~
Good Condition, $50; Magnavotc
Applian ces :
Racondilioned Conaoie Staroo Good Condition.
Waohoro. Drytrl, Ra~oo, Rahi- SSO: 4 Dozen Canning Jara $10,
graton. GO Day Guarantee! 814•3111-2171 .
French City Maylag, 014·448·
NawTIICIOII:
,
n95.
JD 7400 UFWD W /Cab, In
550
Building
Stock: JD 11-400 Qptn Slatlon.W I
Supplies
.carpal 1 Vlnrlln S
$5.00 Yd
Power Quad, In Stock ; 2 ·JO
&amp; Up 60 Patter
Kltd1an Cor51100 MFWD, In Stock: JD 5400
tt plpao, wind· MFWD,
pet In Stock ver 35 Pallatns lllor:lt. br ,
In SIOdt
.
Vlnrl In
Mollohan Carpell, owo. llnllio. u:. Claude Wlnloro,
Rio Grand , OH Call 81•·245et• -441-7444,
Mllcel•~:
5121.
H &amp; S 1350 All Purpou Tank
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Mull Solll 4 Ail SIMI Bulidlngo. 1 Sproarlar, (8 Monthl Old) 17,1150;
Wash8ra, drytra, refrlgaral9tl,
each, 24x30, 30x38, 48x81, JD 3800 Chopper 2 Raw Narrow
rangeo. Skagga Applloncoo, 76 80x125. 111 Coma, 1tl So,ad. Htad $3,500 : New JD 350
Vlnt Street Call et•·446-73D8, Acl Now I Siva 11. Saundera Sprtador, In Stock: New H &amp; S
1-800-499-3499.
Siiogo Wagono, In SID&lt;k.
·
Conw. e14-441-G218.
·

.

•J 10

only rode 6hro, $4600. 304·675-5785.

01816DWNEA.Ifw::.

condition, 1700, 814--1102-5056.

EAST
•6 5

1994 Banchae, good condition, ~

Bear Supar Strike XLR 80 lbo.
Sigh! Quiver, 1275.• 814·448·
4279.

Antiques

''

1888 Honda TRX300, lourlrax 4·
wheeler, •~c . cond., like new,
.$3,ogo firm. Caoh pleaoe. 304675-30117.

Goods

530

Olio.

•
,
·

1DI3 Honda 70 3·whoalar, good
condition. $4(10. 30U75-2074.

Sporting

520

,

1873 Harley Davidson Super
Gilda. loll of ,...., ,_ paint,
lookl I run1 great, 114·882•
37116.

814-446-3151
Ouailty
Furnillro And
Appllorao. Groal DUll On
Caoh And Corry! !W:NT·2-0WN
And !,ar-r
Froo
Daii'lary Within 2511ilal.

r-.

•

1ggo Dodgt Rom Van B-250,
12,000 Millo. se.ooo, can Sa
Soan At GaUipolil Dally Tribuna,
825 Third Avenue, Calllpolia

740

VIRA FURNITUIW:

Sand Box, Picnic Table &amp; llnlt
c.. 814-245-ae7.

S-Z1·95

.4 3
•A 7 6 5
•K82
•A 10 5 2

1ge&amp; Chavy Sr:onadalo •x4, po, ~;

pb, air, 1111. crulla. -77N071.

LAYNE'S FUANillH
Complele home lurnlahlnea.
Houra: Man ·Sat, 1·5. 814-448·
~~· o•r Builvilit Pika
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 12
Oliva Sl, Gallpolio.- &amp; Ultd
turnlrure, heatare, Weat•rn &amp;
--81-1111.

WAnt lo buy: anr Rod UcKueA

J&gt;Otlr1 boo~o. publlohtd around
1li'IO'L 30&amp;-815-78711.

37 F - 8Mip1ar
38Challenge
39 Aclor MonUond
. 41 CIOM relall¥e
42 llaclatr
44 Snaliae
&lt;I&amp;O..._nlng .
41 Paln1er'a a1and
53 Hindu cymbolls
54 lnllnl1e
56 Wioeblrd
57 No1odd
58 Brislle
59 Thlckneaa
60 Tender
61 Dill-.!

confliC1

KIT 'N' CARLYLEe by Larry Wrl&amp;ht

-...rloPrevtouoPuzzla

haid-

I Flsll-

'

'

.

�P 11 10 ·The o.lly Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

Reds
wallop
Phillies

Pick 3:
877
Pick 4:
0246
Buckeye 5:
1-21-30-31-35

Sports, Page 4

Highs Ill mld-1105.

•

..

With Factory Rebates
You Can Actually Pay
Less Than Factory
Invoice on Most
•
Models.

I

Vol. 46, NO. 42
. ,Gopyrlght 1995

· By JIM FREEMAN
Senlinel News SlaiT
.
A consultant hired by the Metj)S
Local Board of Education earlier
this year to assess the district's
buildings reported his findings and
issued recommendations at Toes·
day night's regular board meeting.
Brian Boyd, an architect for
Lock One, Inc. of Marietta, presen ted an 81-page report to the
board consisting of a review of
existing buildings and suggestions
for improving them.
·
Boyd reponed that Meigs High
·school along with Middleport and
Pomeroy elementary schools are m.
good s~ape and need only minor
renovauons .
Other buildings, particularly
Bradbury Elementary School and

the old Central Building at Meigs
Junior High School, however, are
not in good shape, he reported .
Boyd offered two options, the
first calling fot.renovatlons to Middleport and Pomeroy elementary
schools and Meigs High School
while seeking funding for a new or
renovated middle school with an
·audition and consolidating Bradbury , Harrisonville, Salem Cemer,
Rutland and Salisbury elementary ·
schools.
As another option, the district
could seek a bond issue for an
addition to the middle -school for
grades six, seven and eight and add
on to Middleport Elementary
School and renovate other buildings with the exception of Bradbury Elementary School.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)- A U.S . House-Senate conference
committee approved $189 million for the Appalachian Regional
· Commission next year, Sen. Mitch McConnell said.
A Senate proposal originally called for phasing out the com·
mission's funding over the next three years, and a House mea. sure would have immediately eliminated the agency's funding.
McConnell, ll.·Ky., who' spearheaded Tuesday's effort; said
the approval was a "crilical step" in saving the agency.
"Against all odds, ARC Is siill alive," he said. "We are near·
ing lbe finishing line, bullhe real lest In the marathon will come
later this week when Congress voles on the entire budget resolu·

tion. "
McConnell said that vote could come as early as Thursday.
·The commission serves 13 slates, including Ohio, by providing funds for roads, public works and anti-poverty programs.

Southern board names
~ ~Lawrence superintendent
1995 LINCOLN MARK VIII

.99%

V-8, auto., AJC, AM/FM cass. , ti~.

cruise, all power equip., sunroof,
mora.

f4({!fU•• 519
5

Mo.'

On All New Cars &amp; Select Used Cars &amp;Trucks

Signature Series, V-6 , auto .. AJC,
AM/FM cass .. tilt, cruise , Gold
Package, more. · ·
.

"TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS

'399Mo:

Mo:

1993 CHEVROLET CAMERO Z28 ·
V-8, factory air cond., 6 spd. standard, P.S, P.B. , P.W.,
P.S., PDL. lilt, cruise. AM/FM stereo/tape, radial tires,
bucket seat, rear window

1992 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS
V-B. auto., AJC , P$. PB, PW. PDL,

Pwr. seat, tilt , cruise, AM/FM

cassette.

·

;:::::=:====~
V-6, auto., air cond .. AM/FM ster-

eo, PS, PB, PW. POL, tilt, ABS,
etc.

1992 F.iRD T·BIRO

1991 CADILLAC BROUGHAM

auto .. air oond., PS. PB. PW.
tilt, cruise, power seat.
I AMIIFM cassette..

air cond., AM/FM cass ..
tilt. cruise. PS, PB, PW; POL, Pwr.
seat. Only 34,000 miles.
V-8,

a~to . ,

$15,449
auto., air cond., PS , PB , PW,
, Pwr. seat, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
Jcass••ne.

s9,949

1993 FORD TEMPO 4 DR.

1993 FORD MUSTANG LX

4 cylinder, automatic, air conditioning, PS·, PB, PW, POL, tilt, cruise,
AM/FM cassette, more.
1955742

2 Dr., 4 cylinder, air conditioning,

-

-

$159Mo.'

1993 FORD MUSTANG LX

Station Wagon, 4 cylinder, auto.,
air conditioning. PS, PB. AM/FM
cassette, luggage rack. more .
120570

Convertible, 4 cyl., auto., air condi ·
tioning, AM/~ M cassette, till, cruise.
PS, PB, PW POL.
1946921

• . $199Mo.'

-

1991 CHEV. CAMARO Z-28
V-8, auto., air cond., PS. PB, pow-

er door locks, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette, more.

$9,649

$219Mo.'

1993 FORD LX

1~93 FORD TAURUS

V-6, auto., air conditioning, AM/FM

V-6, auto., air cond., AM/FM cas-

cassette, tilt, cruise, PS , PB, PW,
POL, Pwr. seat, etc.
N20830

sette, tilt, cruise, PS. PB. PW, POL,
Pwr. seat. more.
#20790

$239Mo:

4 cyl. ; auto ., air cond., AM/FM
cass., tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW,

4 cyl., auto ., air cond:. AMJFM
cass .. PS , PB, PW, Pow.
locks,

199 Mo.'

5

199 Mo.'
1993 FORD F150 4X2
300, 6 cyl., automatic, air condi-1
tioning , AM/FM cassette, long

$189Mo.'

1993 MERCURY TRACER

24MO.

1994 FORD ESCORT 4 DR.

AM/FM cassette, tilt , cruise, PS, PB ,
PW, POL.
1956491

1992 CHEV. CORSICA

$11,.949

1991 MERC. GRAND MARQUIS

FINANCING
UP T0'36 MONTHS

1993 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL

-

APR* -

1994 FORD TEMPO 4 DR.

-

$239Mo.'

* ALL PAYMENTS QUOTED ARE 24 MONTH RED CARPET
LEASE uTHE PLAN". PAYMENTS ARE BASED ON $2,000
DOWN PAYMENT AT TIME OF DELIVERY.
.
WARRANTY INCLUDED ON ALL CARS.
'

STATE TAXES NOT INCLUDED.

6 cyl, auto, factory NC, P.S., P.B .. P.W., PDL, P.S., tilt,
cruise, AM/FM radio/CO, radial tires, rear window defog.
Ke·~le~;s entry

1993 CHEV. y, TON

1993 CHEV. '!. TON VAN

4.3L 5 spd., air cond., PS , PB,
AM/FM stereo, long bed. sliding
back glass. more.

Conversion, auto., air cand., PS,

$10,949

$13,949

PB , PW, PDL, tilt, cruise, AM/FM
cassette, more.

1993 FORD F150

1992 PONT. TRANSPO RT

Lightning, 35t . HD. auto., AC. tilt,
cruise, PS, PB. PW, POL, AM/FM
cassette, loaded .

V-6, auto., air conditioning. AM/FM

$16,449

$9,949

cassette , tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW,
POL.

1991 CHEV. ASTRO

1991 SUBARU GL

MARK Ill · Conversion. 4.3L, auto.,
AJC, tilt, cruise, PS, PB, PW, POL,
CD.

5 Door hatchback. 4X4, 4 cylin~er,
auto., air conditioning, AM/FM cassette. PS, PB.

$5,949

include Ann Sisson , Donald Dud. James Ray Lawrence was hired
ding, and Carla Shuler for high
superintendent of the Southern
school students; an&lt;) Tricia McNi· l:.oeal School District on a live year
chol, Margaret Smith, Kim Phillips
contract at Monday night's meeting
and Donna Sayre for eleme ntary
of tbe Southern Local Board of
students.
Education.
Hired as s ubs titute s for the
Acting superintendent since Jan1995-96
school year were Earlene
uary when Bob Ord resigned,
Ebersbach
. custodian; Sally CaldLawrence has been on the district's
well,
Evelyn
Foreman and Connie
teaching staff for the past 23 years.
Chevalier,
aides;
and Beck y Wil He was given the five year conson,
aide,
cook
and
cus todian. '!be
tract on a split vote with Don
resignation
of
Alma
Johnso n as
Smitlt, C. T. Chapman, and Marty
cook
effective
Aug.
10
wa~ acceptMorarity voting "yes" and . Susie
ell.
·
·
Grueser and Pete Thoren voting
"no." It was noted that Ute votes by · Charlene Smith was hired as
Grueser and Thoren were against junior hi gh cheerleader advi sor,
Todd Cummins a~ the junior hi gh
the length of the contract.
school girls' basketball coach. and
On recomm endation of SoutbJohn Manuel as assisl:mt .hig h
em High School Principal Gordon
school girls' coach.
Fisher, the board voted to change
The board approved splittin g
the grading system in the hig h
one high school cook's position
school. It was decided that students
into two pans, half at the hi g h
'will be given numbers for eac h
nine-week gradi ng period, and a . school and the ot her at the junior
letter for semesler grades . Consid - high school. Tile change involves a.
current position, not a new one.
eration to changing grading at the
junior high level will be g iven at a
Insurance was tliscussed and
Ju dy Williams of Williams In surlater meeting.
Teachers to carry oul the sum - ance was tltere to discuss options.
mer school program were hired and
Continued on page 3 .
a~

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

makes proposals on MLSD buildings

ARC .is sti// _
a/ive

Sales Consultant

2 ~ i ons, 12 Pages 35 cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, June 28, 1995

c·onsult~nt

MARSHALL McCORKLE

Low toDigbt Ill 60s. Partly
doudy. Thursday, showers.

Regardless of which option, if
any, considered by the board, Boyd
recommended closing Bradbury
Elementary School due its age and
the high cost of renovations to
bring it up to current standards. In
addition, the existing facility does
not meet stme guidelines, he reported.
The original school was a fourroom building built ·in the late
1800s and added onto in the early
1950s, according to the report.
Boyd also presented several cost
estimates.
He estimated the cost of building a new middle school for 62 5
students at $6,412,500 compared to
·$5,000,000 for renovating the
school and razing the .Central
Building.

The central buildin£ at the
junior high is in extremely bad
shape, he reported.
The cost of closing Bradbury,
Harri sonville, Salem Center, Rut·
land and Salisbury elementary
schools and buildin~ one additional
new elementary school for ~7 students is $3,841,920, compared to
two schools for 334 students each
at $5,050,080, his re port stated .
The cost of Middleport and
Pomeroy elementary school renovations are estimated at $945,000
and $652,000, respectively .
The total project cost was estimated between $13,928,454 and
$19,204,200.
The second option or renovating
the elementary schools, wit11 the
exception of Bradbury Elementary,

wou-ld be around $ 14 ,133 ,600
Boyd estimated.
'
"Historically, the di s trict has
had to do sometl1ing witb its buildings every 20 10 30 years and tlmt
time is coming around again."
Boyd said. "You (hoard members)
are faced with a number of deci- ·
sions."
Board members did not discuss
which options tbey would consider.
" Start plannin g now" be
advised. "SUIII looking at sit~s and
asking questions of the public ."
In other business. tl1e board:
- Accep wd 1he res ignal ion or
Joan Edward s as cook at Middleport E lementary School effective
Aug. 21 a/ld extend ed tbe comract
of Meigs Junior High School principal Dave Gaul from 10 to II

months.
- Autborized interim Treasurer
Richard Koker to advert ise and
accept bids for dairy prcxhicts, bakcry produciS, lleet insurance, tire'
ami tubes and fire e xtinguisher
rep:&gt;Ur.
- Renewed contraCis with ,
AAA for driver's education and
with t11e Ohio School Iloard Association lo administer the distri ct' s
workers compensation program.
Presenl were Superintendent
Ilill Buckley , Koker and board
members Larry Rupe, Randy
Humphreys, Roger Abbott. Scott
Walton and John HOod .
The· board's next meeting will
be July I I. 7 p.m . at the central
nfllce in Pomeroy.

Wagons Hoi

Racine visited by mule-drawn wagon train
By JIM FREEMAN I
ing."
biggest thing going on in Racine·," . ration formed in 1973 that now
Sentinel News Staff
Occasionally, Castelllme verbal- said one resident.
operates programs nationwide.
A ss istant wago nmaster Mik e
Youths are referred to ' Vis'ion. A team of nine, mule-drawn ly reprimands a youngs1er violating
wagons moved into Racine Tues- a basic safety rule: "Don' t sit under Porath of Minneapolis has been Quest through juvenile courts, proday morning .
that animal," he commands one with the program for almost six bnunn departments lUld social serReally.
teen .
years having accompanied wagon vice agencies.
The nine wagons , 50 kids and
Racin e Mayor Jeff Thornton trains to Ohio, Pe nn sy lvania, VirThe corporation' s treatment pro30 staff members of tbe Visio n- welcomed Castellane .into the com- ginia and Kansa.~ . The wagon train ~nun s are founded in basic parcntQuest Wagon Team circled wagons munity.
· winters over in Florida, he mg 'kllls. Under the guidance of
in the front yard of Sout11em Junior
"l think it' s great what you' re explained.
trained "parents," youths deal with
High School while Racine resi - doing ," he said.
An average day on tbe road con- the issues of abuse. aban(lonment
dents, watching this sight not comCastellane sai d most small sis ts of a 6 a. m. wakeup followed and boundaries that have dominmmonly viewed since the last centu- towns welcome the wagon train by tbe wagon train moving out by 8 cd their young lives.
ry, stood by the sidelines or walked
with open ann s.
a.m .
·:we' re pnwiding Ute ba~ic p:lf.
through examining the encampTo illustrate, a neighboring
When th e wagons .stop, the enhng some of these kids have
ment.
·
property owner offered shade pro- yo ungsters tak e ca re of their ani- never had," ca~tellane said.
VisionQuest ' s Wagon -Train
vided by nearby tree' and even mals an d ha ve thr ee hours of
People are welcome to visit Ute
program stresses cooperation, self· offered to let th e wagon !rain 's schooling, he explained. When tbe camp. llowcvcr, _people should try
discipline and ihe work ethic while horses and mules graze in her tield. wagon train ·stops for more than a to avotd dtsruplmg 1he site in the
teaching youngsters a new sense of
OUter Racine resitlen!s (llfered day, the kids have school all day evening when youngsters are likely
time, distance and responsibility. to donate fresh com and other veg- .eaming credit towards their high to he eating or taking care of perMost of the kids on this particular embles. .
.
school graduation.
sonal hy giene need•, wagonmas ters
wagon train are from Philadelphia
"I think it's g reat, this is the
VisionQuest is ;l private corpo- explained.
·
or Pittsburgh, wagon mas ters stat ed.
The team also consists of about
50 animals, mostly mules with a
scattering of horses ridden by sta ff
members.
Wagonmaster Mark Castellane
of Fort Wort h, Texas. has been
with the wagon train for about 2
1/2 years covering, as he explained,
better than 10,000 miles tltrough 16
.
.
states.
"You have to love it," he said.
"The mules are our biggest therapists," Caste IIane said. "You can· t
rush 'em. T hey mi ght be able to
make a person back dowu, but Ute
mules don' t budge."
lu addition, the youngsters Jearn .
respousibility throug h caring for
Ute animals, he explained. In time,
they learn respect for each other.
For an cmmple, he singled out a
nearby youngster grooming a mule.
brushing its tail.
CIRCLING THE WAGONS ·Nine, mule·
HiA h Sehoul until Saturday at which time they
"At first the kids are terrified,"
drawn wagons moved into Racine Tuesday
will
continue their journey In Franklin l'a. The
he said. "Maybe that's not the hesl
morning as part of VisionQuest's Wagon Team
team
consists or nin~ wagon$, SO kid~ and 30
way to groom the mul e's tail, but
project for inner city children. The children are
sla~ memher~ a_nd stres..;;es cooperation, r~spon­
Utey have arrived at an undersumd stayin~ in Raci ne in frnnl nf Soutliern Junior
slh thty, self-dtsctpline and the' work ethic.

Racine prepares to 'let freedom · ring' July 4
With lndepe~dence Day just
around the com er. plans have been
completed for the annual Racine
Fourth of July observance. .
The theme of the event will be
"Let Freedom Rm' g."
The parade lineup will lie ·at
9:15 a.m. at Sou them High School , ·
followed by a flag-raising at 9:45
a.m. The para de will start at 10
a.m. and proceed down Elm Sireet
to Third Stree~ downtown and onto
Vine and Fifth streets before head ing back to the high school.
First. second and third-place
cash prizes wi II be awarded for
floats. Racine Home National Bank
is providing the $100 prize for
tirst-place in the religious category.
with the Racine Volunt eer Fire
Department providing second and
third-place prizes of $75 and $50,
respectively.
Douglas and Tonja Hunter will
sponsor the bicycle decorating contest for youths 12 and under with
prizes of $13, $10 and $5 .
Tbe fire department auxiliary
. will sponsor $25, $15 and $10
prizes to the three best non-religious entries . SSS Speed Stable
will present trophies to the three
winners in the horse and rider cate·gory.
Parade winners will .be
announced after the parade. Any·
one having questions about entry in

, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . event is $3 for juniors and $5 for
seniors .
Each frog entered will get three
-~or
jumps off the pad witb the longest
·
II
measure fro m th e pad to the la.t
9
5
Para
1
J
·u,nn,. 1·eceiving prize mone y. There_
• :I a.m. , de line-up at Southern I igh School
, 9:45 a.m . _ Flag-raising ceremony
is no limit on U1e number ol frogs a
• 10 a.m._ Parade begins
person can register and rem-a-frogs
• 11 a.m._ Racine VFD chicken barbecue at fire department
will be available. All trog' wtll be
• 1 p.m. _ Children's games begin
.
trcat e&lt;l humanely. ami re turned to
• 2 p.m._ Home Run Derby and Amique Tractor Pull
their natural habit a t. For more
• 2 p.m._ Billy Lee Show on stage
information , call Aaron Young a1
• 3 p.m. - Out of the Blue !land
949 -2545.
• 4 p.m. - Mountain Top Singers ·
Th e Racine VFD will. have a
• 7 p.m. - C.J . and the Country Gentlemen
chicken barbecue at II a.m. and the
• 8 p.m. _ Hupp Family Band
group will be selling snow cones at
• 10 p.m.-' Fireworks
the park. The fire deparnnent auxilOther events include a kiddie tractor pull and frog jwnping coniary will be selling homemade ice
test.
cream . In additio n, craft vendors
. All activities following the parade will take [llace m t11e fire
will be set up in the park .
department annex and Star Mill Park. Those attendmg should bnng
Entertainment on the Star Mill
lawn chairs.
Park stage will include the Billy
Lee Show at 2 p .m., Out of the
u1e parade should call Coun_cilman
The Kiddie Tractor Pull, spon- Blue Band at 3 p .m., Mountain Top
S&lt;;att Hill at 949-2231. Individuals sored by Dr: Mel Weese, will fea- Singers at 4 p .m ., C .J. and the
leaving vehicles at the high scl)ool ture trophies lor the first three win- Country Gentlemen at 7 p.m. and
during the parade should park them mlrs in each age group .
the Hupp Family Band at 8 p.m.
in the side parking lots so the lineThe Racine Area Community
The day will end with flfCwork s
up may form in Ute center Jot
Organization is holding its second at 10 p.m. with parking in tl1e field
The Home Run Derby, directed Fourth of July Frog Jumping Con- inside the walking track.
by Gary Norris, will be held on the test at the park. witlt cash prizes
All activities following the
lower ballfield starting at 2 p.m., being awarded in two age groups . parade will take place at the fire
with prizes given to the winners .
In the junior division , prizes of department annex and Star Mill
The Big Bend Fann Antiques $40, $25 and SJO will be awarded Park. Those attending should bring
will sponsor an antique tractor pull while winners in the senior division lawn chairs. Parking space is availat 2 p.m. with cash awards in sev- (age 16 and up) will receive $100, able itiSide the walking track at the
era! classes.
$75 and $50. Registration for t11e park.

Fourth of July activ:1·t1·es
scheduled
Raci"ne

I
t

'

PREPARING t' OR INDEPENDENCE DAY- local commu·
nities are displaying plenty of red, white and blue as residents propare for upcoming Fourth of July observances. Dale and Kathryn
Hart of Racine, with the assistance of backhoe operator John Holman. Installed patriotic banners purchased recen!ly by the RaciM
Area Community Organization.

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